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Slovakia's SPP sees no hazard to its Russian gas imports

Slovakia's SPP said on Wednesday that a current legal change secures it from any potential seizure of its Russian gas imports or associated claims, the company stated on Wednesday.

The statement addresses uncertainty over gas supplies from Russia, after Austria's OMV

cautioned last month

of the suspension of products from Russia's Gazprom following a foreign court judgment, without identifying the case.

SPP is not threatened by a possible execution by a third party that would win a court case with a company of a 3rd country in Europe and wish to declare payment at the expense of SPP, the company said in a declaration.

Hungary, which also gets most of its gas from Russia, released a decree in May that prevents payments made by state-owned energy corporation MVM to Gazprom from being seized, arguing it would put the nation's energy supply at threat.

SPP accommodates about two-thirds of Slovak need and has a supply agreement with Gazprom until 2034 for gas piped through Ukraine.

It will not be possible to take the gas in the transition or circulation network, nor the claims of a third party from a particularly substantial contract for the supply of natural gas, SPP said.

This procedure considerably increases the security of gas products for SPP customers.

The future of those materials is also in doubt due to the expiration of a transit contract through Ukraine at the end of this year which Ukraine does not want to extend.

SPP has said it is associated with speak to potentially take over the transit agreement as part of a larger consortium of unnamed European buyers to guarantee continued flows after the end of the year.

The company has likewise signed deals with Western entities to diversify its supplies and avoid any disturbance to its present gas flow.

Earlier this month, Uniper won a $14 billion arbitration against Gazprom about suspended gas shipments since 2022.

(source: Reuters)