%0 Report %A Mikula, Stepan %A Sabatini, Fabio %T The Cost of Industrial Destruction: Evidence from Ukrainian Strikes on Russian Refineries %D 2026 %8 2026 Jul %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 18772 %U https://www.iza.org/publications/dp18772 %X We study the local economic effects of Ukrainian long-range strikes on Russian oil refineries, combining a verified event-level strike record with quality-screened daily satellite radiance from NASA Black Marble. The analysis covers 29 large Russian refineries, 22 of which sustain verified direct hits over June 2022-May 2026. Using a monthly staggered difference-in-differences design, we find that nighttime radiance falls immediately and persistently after a refinery enters the strike campaign: by roughly 30 percent in the innermost measured ring and by 15-18 percent within five kilometers, with the effect attenuating until it becomes small at twenty-five kilometers. A complementary daily instrumental-variables design uses directional wind alignment to shift strike incidence and trace the strike-day dynamic. Radiance rises at short horizons, consistent with a fire-related light signature corroborated by NASA FIRMS detections, and turns negative at a six-month horizon, with weak-instrument-robust inference. Applying the same satellite product and empirical specification to 106 non-refinery deep-strike targets produces no comparable contraction, weighing against a generic-war-disruption interpretation. %K conflict economics %K industrial destruction %K drone warfare %K nighttime lights %K staggered difference-in-differences %K instrumental variables %K Russia-Ukraine war