Another loaded Russian oil tanker stricken at sea
In the latest incident involving a Russian vessel, the Koala was carrying 130,000 tons of fuel oil, wrote the Russian-language Baza Telegram channel, which has close ties to the Russian security services.
"According to our sources, there were several explosions in the engine room, after which the ship filled with water," posted the outlet.
The governor of the Leningrad region by the city of St Petersburg, Alexander Drozdenko, later confirmed an accident in the area. The tanker's engine room was damaged when the engines were started, the official said.
The accident occurred near the port of Ust-Luga, around 150 kilometres west of St Petersburg. All 24 crew members were reportedly able to safely disembark onto the land.
While Baza reported that the stern of the tanker ran aground on a sandbank, Drozdenko said it was able to be moored at a jetty with no loss of oil into the water.
The ship officially flies the flag of Antigua and Barbuda. It is unclear whether it also belongs to Russia's so-called shadow fleet, which the country uses to circumvent international sanctions on its export of oil.
Meanwhile, another tanker reportedly ran aground in the Russian Far East. According to the Interfax news agency, a Chinese vessel encountered difficulties in a storm near the Russian island of Sakhalin.
Authorities were preparing for a possible pump-out of part of the load on board the tanker, which was said to be carrying coal and heavy fuel oil.
In mid-December, two Russian tankers carrying thousands of tons of fuel oil sank in the Black Sea, causing major spillages into the sea and along the shoreline.
According to ecologists, the environmental damage in the Kerch Strait, which separates Russia from Crimea, will continue for many years.
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CNBC
5 hours ago
- CNBC
Nvidia's China return buys time for Beijing to boost its chip drive
As semiconductors have become a geopolitical hot potato over the past few years, it's no surprise that Nvidia , the leader in artificial intelligence-related chips, has been caught up in escalating tensions between the U.S. and China. When Nvidia returned to the China market last week , seemingly with the blessing of Washington, it sparked debate over the strategic implications for the U.S.' dominance in AI and China's own focus on boosting its domestic chip and tech industry. For the U.S., Nvidia's return could help cement American strength in AI globally, experts told CNBC. For China, it could buy the country time as it continues on its own path to build Nvidia rivals and keep pace with AI software development. It's a tricky relationship, underscoring the strategic importance of the graphics processing units (GPUs) that Nvidia designs and that currently underpin the world's AI. "The relationship is symbiotic but I do believe China needs the U.S. technology more at this moment in time," Daniel Newman, CEO of Futurum, told CNBC's "The China Connection" last week. Nvidia's warnings Earlier this year, the U.S. government restricted exports of Nvidia's H20 chip to China. The product, a less-advanced version of Nvidia's leading hardware, had been created to comply with previous U.S. export restrictions. Washington has expressed concerned that these chips could be used in areas such as advancing the Chinese military and China's own AI industry. Nvidia took a $4.5 billion writedown on the unsold inventory and warned the China restrictions could impact billions of dollars of potential sales. Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, has been critical of export curbs . He has said it would be a "tremendous loss" for Nvidia not to participate in China and that rival Huawei would be able to fulfil the needs of the country in its absence. Huang has argued that the restrictions could boost China's domestic semiconductor industry and that it risks eroding America's technological edge. That message appears to have got through to the White House. Nvidia said last week that it received backing from the U.S. government to resume sales of H20 in China. How the move will benefit the U.S. From a business perspective, Nvidia is expected to gain. But for Washington, the move is more strategic. "We want to keep having the Chinese use the American technology stack, because they still rely upon it," Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CNBC last week. Nvidia has managed to gain a formidable position in the market for semiconductors required to train and run AI applications, not just because of its hardware but also because of the popularity of its software platform known as CUDA, that developers build on. This creates an "ecosystem" around Nvidia's products which has proven sticky for its users. The return of the H20 to the world's second-largest economy will "buy China time" to boost its domestic industry, according to Pranay Kotasthane, deputy director at the Takshashila Institution. "But it will also buy the U.S. companies some respite. China is Nvidia's largest market and is home to 50 per cent of AI developers according to Jensen Huang. If that path is completely closed, American firms like Nvidia will find it difficult to raise revenues and re-invest them in the next round of research and development," Kotasthane said. "It might be justifiable to restrain access to the most advanced chips but to expand the scope of the restrictions doesn't make strategic sense." China domestic chips in focus Huawei has been China's leading player in developing AI-focused chips. The country's technology companies are using some of Huawei's hardware but the firm has yet to overtake the dominance of Nvidia's latest chips. One possible outcome is that U.S. export curbs will accelerate China's domestic efforts. China has been looking to boost its domestic semiconductor industry with a particular focus on AI chips. There are a whole host of startups working on new products in the country. Nvidia's return to China could slowdown that progress. "If Nvidia's chips are made available to Chinese firms, it could weaken momentum behind domestic chip projects, cut off capital, and delay progress in domestic Chinese hardware. This retains U.S. tech influence over global AI rails," Tejas Dessai, director of research at Global X ETFs, told CNBC by email. Ultimately, it all goes back to Nvidia's software which keeps developers locked into its hardware. "Chinese model developers still prefer to use Nvidia hardware, because the domestic alternative AI stack, particularly the software development environment from Huawei is still difficult to use and lacks the depth and flexibility of Nvidia's offering," Paul Triolo, a partner at DGA-Albright Stonebridge Group, told CNBC by email. Can China catch up to Nvidia? Still, China's direction of travel and its quest for domestic providers of AI chips is unlikely to change. "Eventually Chinese AI model developers will have to transitions to a domestic AI stack," Triolo said. Nvidia's chips have proved very effective at training huge AI models that require massive amounts of data to be processed. The actual running of those AI model in products like chatbots is known as inferencing. This process may require a different type of chip, which Chinese tech giants as well as startups are working on. "In chips, China's opportunity could come when the focus shifts to inference. That's when demand for lower cost, efficient processors could scale, and we believe custom chip programs from big Chinese tech companies could ultimately serve that demand," Dessai of Global X ETFs said.


Miami Herald
6 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Russia Will Soon Fire 2,000 Drones a Day: ISW
Russia's drone production has expanded so much that within months, it might be able to launch up to 2,000 of the devices in a single night, according to a report. Moscow fired another barrage of drones and missiles on Ukrainian cities overnight Sunday. Ukraine's Air Force said Moscow launched 450 drones and missiles targeting Kyiv and the cities of Ivano-Frankivsk and Kharkiv. But Ukrainian and German officials have raised the alarm that Russia's production of Shahed-type drones had grown to such an extent that strike packages four times bigger could be possible by November. Newsweek has contacted the Russian defense ministry for comment. Moscow continues to step up its drone bombardment of Ukrainian cities as Russian President Vladimir Putin ignores calls for a ceasefire. Moscow's forces initially relied on Iranian-made Shahed or "kamikaze" drones to wreak havoc in strikes on Ukrainian infrastructure but is now using the technology to produce its own devices in its own factories across Russia. Reports by German and Ukrainian officials about this increasing capacity will raise alarm about Moscow's intentions come winter when it could use the colder months to target the Ukrainian population. Russia has been stepping up its Shahed-type strike drones and decoy drones in overnight strikes with the largest attack so far including 728 drones taking place on July 8. But Moscow is boosting drone production capacity with the aim of launching 2,000 drones in one overnight strike package by November. That is according to the head of the German Ministry of Defense's Planning and Command Staff, Major General Christian Freuding, reported by Ukrainian outlet Suspilne citing comments he made to the a German military podcast. In reporting the comments, the Institute for the Study of War said current growth in Russia's drone production and usage makes this number achievable in that time frame although such a strike package would not be sustainable every night. This is a double the estimate to one made July 4 by commander of the Ukrainian Unmanned Systems Forces Major Robert Brovdi who said increased production and stockpiles means Russia could launch 1,000 drones in a single strike package. This figure is also a marked increase from the assessment on June 9 of Ukraine's Main Military Intelligence Directorate (GUR) that Russia plans to increase production capacity to 190 drones per day, by the end of 2025. Freuding said Saturday that Ukraine and its allies must look at cheaper ways to counter this threat because traditional air defense methods, like Patriot interceptors, are not best suited to defend against drones. It comes as Russia showcased a drone factory near Kazan in the Tatarstan region which is producing drones, including the Geran-2 which is also an Iranian design. In a propaganda video, teenagers are seen assembling the devices for use against Ukraine at the facility at the Alabuga industrial park. the Russian Defense Ministry's television channel it produces a 5,200 Shahed-type strike drones and decoy models a month as of May and will make thousands of Geran drones at the "largest plant in the world." German Major General Christian Freuding: "The Russian army plans to launch up to 2,000 drones over Ukraine at one time." Institute for the Study of War on Sunday: "Russia may be able to launch up to 2,000 drones in one night by November 2025, should this current growth trend in drone usage continue." Timur Shagivaliev, CEO of the Alabuga Special Economic Zone, told Russian defense ministry outlet Zvezda the drone factory in Tartastan is "the largest such plant in the world and the most plan was to produce several thousand (Geran drones) - now we are producing nine times more than planned." Russia is likely to continue its drone attacks on Ukraine which Freuding said Kyiv could counter by striking drone production sites and lowering interception costs. Ukraine has also increased its domestic drone production with President Volodymyr Zelensky saying Kyiv can produce up to 8 million drones annually but it needs more foreign funding. Related Articles Melania Trump Attacked in Russian State MediaRussia and Ukraine Exchange Series of Major StrikesRussia Touts Trump-Putin Meeting for Major DeadlineNATO Scrambles Fighter Jets Amid 'Massive' Russian Attacks 2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.


Miami Herald
6 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Russia Launches Heavy Strikes Despite Trump Arms Pledge to Ukraine
EDITORS NOTE: EDS: REPEATING to RECODE as a Page 1 refer and to UPDATE list of related stories.); (With: UKRAINE-WEAPONS, HEGSETH-UKRAINE, RUSSIAN-CONDUCTOR-CANCEL); Liubov Sholudko and Kim Barker contributed reporting. KYIV, Ukraine -- An explosion damaged the entrance to a Kyiv subway station where people were sheltering from an air attack. A missile or a drone set an empty kindergarten on fire in the Ukrainian capital, officials said. And a city in western Ukraine endured its heaviest barrage of the war. Russia overnight Monday fired the latest in a series of missile and exploding drone assaults at Ukraine that have steadily escalated in recent months even as ceasefire talks began in the spring. At least two people were killed and 15 others injured, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine said. The recent strikes have caught the attention of President Donald Trump, who cited the Russian bombing campaign when he announced a plan last week to provide new military aid for Ukraine. The attacks early Monday were the first large volleys since that announcement, when Trump said "we are very unhappy" with Russia. Trump said the United States would sell Patriot air defense systems to allies who quickly provide their own systems to Ukraine, bolstering defenses. But the attack Monday highlighted a rising menace the American missiles cannot counter: vast assaults of slow-flying, exploding drones, fired nearly nightly. In Kyiv, the engines of Russian drones flying over the city were heard nearly continuously from after midnight until first light, interspersed with dozens of explosions. One explosion hit the entryway to the Lukianivska subway station while dozens of people sheltered inside, sending clouds of dust and smoke billowing down escalators and through tunnels. Men, women and children awoke coughing in clouds of smoke, said Diane Mailat, 23, a hairdresser who was sheltering in the station with her husband and cat. They had believed they would be safe on the platform, more than 200 feet underground. "People started to panic," she said. Some clambered with children and pets into the train tunnels to escape the smoke. Only after about an hour did the dust settle. The mayor of Ivano-Frankivsk, a city in western Ukraine that had been a haven from the violence and rarely targeted, reported the most intensive strikes of the war early Monday. The escalation of the air war comes as Russia has successfully stepped up its industrial-scale manufacturing of exploding drones and decoys, which are small drones fired into Ukraine mostly to distract air defense teams. Moscow's rate of fire with cruise and ballistic missiles has remained steady, according to the Ukrainian military. To protect against missiles, Ukraine is expecting a first delivery of Patriots from Germany under the agreement Trump announced last week. The Patriots are not cost-effective against the cheap, mass-produced exploding drones that now pose the gravest risks for Ukraine from sheer volume. Russia uses a model, Shahed, originally designed in Iran. Now more Shaheds hit targets in Ukraine than missiles, the Ukrainian military says. Russia launched 728 drones and decoys overnight into July 9, according to the Ukrainian air force. That is more than Russia fired in the whole month of July last year. On Monday, the air force said it had shot down or electronically jammed 403 out of 426 drones in the volley. By fall, Ukrainian officials say they expect Russia to routinely launch 1,000 drones per volley. The officer overseeing a Ukraine task force in Germany's military, Maj. Gen. Christian Freuding, estimated last week that Russia planned to eventually launch 2,000 drones at a time. The Russian strategy is akin to shooting a shotgun, as firing drones in vast numbers ensures some reach a target even as many miss or are shot down. In another setback for Ukraine, Russia's rate of breaching air defenses with Shahed drones is also rising: Last year, 7% hit their targets. So far this year, 11% have, according to air force figures. Ukrainian and Western engineers are experimenting with methods like lasers, robotic gun turrets and interceptor drones to bolster interception rates. Ukraine currently uses machine guns mounted on trucks, helicopters, fighter jets and domestically made interceptor drones. Beyond the damage from direct hits, the drones have a psychological effect in depriving civilians and soldiers of sleep during overnight attacks. They also signal to the Ukrainian population that all locations in Ukraine are at risk of frequent attacks. The recent attacks by Moscow have shown no sign of relenting even as the Trump administration seeks to end the war with ceasefire talks. Trump has recently shifted from a policy of blaming Ukraine for causing the invasion to one aimed at helping the country to defend itself more effectively. At the same time, Ukraine has also been conducting long-range drone strikes into Russia, including a barrage overnight Saturday into Sunday. Russia's military said it had shot down more than 230 drones in the attacks, which delayed flights at Russian airports but did not appear to have caused any casualties. This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Copyright 2025