Mazut (Russian: Мазут, romanized: Mazut) is a low-quality heavy fuel oil, used in power plants and similar applications in Iran and some countries of the former Soviet Union. In the West, through fluid catalytic cracking, mazut is distilled into diesel and other light distillates.[2][3] Mazut may be used for heating houses in some parts of the former USSR and in countries of the Far East[clarification needed] that do not have the facilities to blend or break it down into more conventional petro-chemicals.
Mazut is burned in Iran to compensate for the shortage of natural gas but it has caused environmental problems, such as huge amounts of air pollution in big cities such as Tehran.[4]
Oil spills involving Mazut have unique harmful effects on marine environment as the fuel-oil solidifies at 25°C[5] and sinks to the ocean floor making it impossible to chemically remediate[6]. On the 15th December 2024, two oil-tankers crashed in the Kerch Strait resulting in 5,000 tonnes of Mazut entering the environment known as the 2024 Black Sea oil spill. A similar incident occurred in 2007 also in the Kerch Strait.
Mazut-100 is a fuel oil that is manufactured to GOST specifications, for example, GOST 10585-75 (not active) or GOST 10585-2013 (active as per December 2019[7]). Mazut is almost exclusively[citation needed] manufactured in Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and Turkmenistan.[8] This product is typically used for larger boilers in producing steam, since the energy value is high.
The most important factor when grading this fuel is the sulfur content, which can mostly be affected by the source feedstock. For shipment purposes, this product is considered a "dirty oil" product, and because viscosity drastically affects whether it is able to be pumped, shipping has unique requirements. Much like No. 6 fuel oil (Bunker C), mazut is a refinery residual product, that is, products left over after gasoline, diesel, and other light distillates are distilled from crude oil except, unlike bunker fuel, mazut is produced from much lower grade feedstocks.