Fly for cover
Shutdowns at Russian airports due to drone activity are at a record high since the war began

Two Russian airports have faced shutdown on average every day this year due to Ukrainian drone activity. A noticeable increase was recorded this year — on 6 and 7 May, just days before Russia celebrated Victory Day, the country faced some of the worst disruption to civil aviation since the start of the war as Ukrainian drones attacked a number of Russian regions, paralysing over 10 civilian airports.
In 2023 and 2024, most airport closures occurred in Moscow and Kazan. Airports in other cities suffered far fewer shutdowns.
In 2025, cities in western Russia have been most heavily affected, including Saratov, Volgograd, Nizhny Novgorod and Penza, with drones targeting large industrial and oil-refining centres.
Russia has introduced Carpet Plan to detect unidentified flying objects in the vicinity of an airport. When that occurs, planes must leave the danger zone. For three years, this has become routine for air traffic in the European part of Russia.
Not all air defence systems can “distinguish a low-flying drone from a passenger aircraft coming into land”.


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