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MOL Hungary and MVM combine forces to ship Azeri crude oil to Central Europe

MOL, the Hungarian oil-and-gas group, and MVM, the state-owned energy firm in Slovakia will charter tankers together to transport up to 160,000 tons of crude oil per year from Azerbaijan. This move is intended to diversify Hungary's and Slovakia's energy supply.

Both companies will transport crude oil via the Baku, Tbilisi, Ceyhan (BTC), to the Ceyhan Terminal in Turkey, where it will then be distributed among MOL Group markets with an emphasis on Hungary and Slovakia.

The companies stated that through this collaboration, MOL can increase the volume alternative crude oil processed at its refineries up to 160.000 tons per annum.

MOL already imports one tanker of Azeri oil per month. This would be equivalent to two tanker shipments a year.

MOL bought Chevron's stake in the Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli (ACG) oilfield in the Caspian Sea in 2020 and MVM announced last year that it would buy a 5% stake in Azerbaijan's Shah Deniz gas field.

MOL's two refineries in Slovakia, Hungary and the Ukraine are fed by Russian crude oil via the southern spur of Druzhba Pipeline. However, MOL is investing in technologies to move away from Urals Oil.

MOL stated last year that progress had been slower than expected. It added that MOL can refine up 30-40% non Russian crude at its refineries located in Slovakia and Hungary. This could increase to 100% by 2026 if investments are made.

(source: Reuters)