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The Russian-owned Serbian refinery has enough crude oil to run through February

Serbia's majority Russian owned oil company NIS announced on Monday that it had enough crude to keep its refinery running through February, after resuming imports under a newly-waived U.S. sanction waiver.

NIS, in a?statement? on its website, confirmed the statement of energy minister Dubravka Djedovic Handanovic, and announced that it had restarted its Pancevo refining plant, Serbia's sole refinery. It was reported that the first diesel quantities should be on sale on January 27.

The refinery will be working throughout the month of February, it stated.

"Further Work?will be coordinated?with decisions on enabling?operational activities of the company."

In October, the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Department of Treasury sanctioned NIS, in which Russia's Gazprom and Gazprom have majority stakes. This was part of broader sanctions targeting Russia's oil sector in response to Moscow's conflict in Ukraine.

NIS has been?granted an exemption from sanctions by OFAC up until January 23. This allows it to import crude through Croatia's JANAF pipeline.

The company has until the end of March to complete the sale of the Russian stakes. It is currently in the middle of negotiations with MOL, a Hungarian firm.

Peter Szijjarto, the Hungarian foreign minister, said that he expected that OFAC would approve the initial deal in the next few days.

Gazprom owns 11.3% of NIS and Gazprom neft 44.9%. Serbian government owns 29.9% of NIS. (Reporting and editing by Louise Heavens, Ivana Sekularac)

(source: Reuters)