Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed on 21 June that Ukrainian drones now have an operational range of 3,000 km 1. The Ukrainian president made the statement in Kyiv days after Ukraine's drones reached the Tyumen refinery in western Siberia , and it reframes that attack from a single feat into a repeatable capability.
Range changes the arithmetic of defence. A one-off strike forces a one-off response; a confirmed 3,000 km reach forces Russia to assume every plant inside that radius is a target every night. The figure puts assets across the Urals and into Siberia within the envelope, the very depth that had let those refineries run without serious air cover. Defending a 3,000 km arc with the interceptor stock Russia has is a different problem from defending the front.
For ordinary Russians the announcement lands as a forecast, not a headline. Refineries that fed regional forecourts undisturbed now carry strike risk, and that risk is what turns scattered queues into the kind of sustained shortage no single plant loss explains. Zelenskyy has put a number on how much of Russia's refining map is now contestable, and the number is most of it.
