Latest News

MOL Hungary says Danube refinery has restarted at reduced capacity

The Hungarian oil company MOL announced on Tuesday that it has resumed production at its main Danube Refinery following an earlier fire at a distillation unit which processes more than 40% of the refinery’s crude intake.

MOL's and Hungary’s energy supply was under pressure last week on two fronts due to the fire, and U.S. sanction against Russian oil companies Lukoil & Rosneft.

According to MOL, the refinery processes a large amount of Russian crude that is delivered through the Druzhba Pipeline. International Energy Agency data show that it effectively covers Hungary's demand for oil and petroleum products.

According to LSEG, the AV3 unit where the fire started processes more than 40% of the refinery’s crude intake.

The restart of the units that were not affected by fire went according to plan, so the Danube Refinery started fuel production with a reduced capacity, MOL reported on Tuesday. It added that Hungary's supply of fuel was secure.

Viktor Orban, Hungary's prime minister, will meet Donald Trump next week in Washington to discuss U.S. oil sanctions against Russian companies and other topics. (Reporting and editing by Bernadettebaum; Krisztina than)

(source: Reuters)