A drone has just hit a fuel tank at Dubai International Airport (DXB), the busiest airport in the Middle East. The Dubai Media Office confirmed the incident less than half an hour ago.
“A drone incident in the vicinity of Dubai International Airport (DXB) affected one of the fuel tanks. Dubai Civil Defence teams are currently working to bring the fire under control. No injuries have been reported so far.”
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Fuel Tank Ablaze, Civil Defence On Scene
The fuel tank is burning, and emergency teams are battling the blaze as it threatens to disrupt airport operations. Last year, DXB handled a staggering 87 million passengers and connects 260 destinations worldwide.
The sheer scale of the damage is sobering. A tiny drone, costing less than a business-class ticket from Terminal 3, has reached the aviation fuel supply — the lifeblood of the airport. This is the third confirmed drone strike near DXB since the conflict began.
Drone Attacks Escalate – From Data Centres to Fuel Tanks
- March 11: Two drones struck near DXB, injuring four people.
- March 1: Drone attacks targeted AWS data centres nearby.
- Today: Aviation fuel tanks hit — a critical escalation.
Fuel tanks at international airports aren’t random targets. They’re vital for aircraft refuelling. A sustained fire here could ground flights and cripple the airport’s lifeline.
Wider Impact: Economy, Tourism & Security at Risk
The UAE has endured 294 ballistic missiles, 15 cruise missiles, and over 1,600 drone strikes since February 28. Damage spans from data centres and iconic towers to oil zones and hospitals.
This latest incident forces a harsh new reality: even the Dubai airport is now in the crosshairs. Tourism is already down by $600 million daily. Real estate markets have plunged, and insurance coverage remains thin.
Dubai built DXB to showcase the Gulf as a global hub — but now, those ambitions face a drone threat that could redefine regional security and economics.
The fuel tank is burning. Civil Defence is responding. No injuries reported. But the threat has landed squarely on the airport that powers the skies over the Middle East.