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MOL Hungary says that capacity tests will begin on the Adria pipeline next week

Hungary's Oil and Gas Company?MOL announced on Friday that capacity testing on the Adria oil pipeline will begin on March 11, and last for 10 months. The company is attempting to find alternative routes as Russian crude oil supplies are set to cease at the end 2027.

MOL, the operator of refineries in Hungary, Slovakia and Romania, has expressed concerns about whether or not the Adria Pipeline can meet their needs. JANAF, a Croatian operator, dismissed these concerns.

Hungary and Slovakia want to continue receiving supplies from Russia, and are exempted?from the current European Union sanctions. Adria is a viable alternative to the EU's plan to ban all Russian oil imports in response to Moscow's invasion into Ukraine.

MOL stated on Friday that it was in everyone's best interest to let the facts speak for themselves after contradictory testing and a wide range of public statements.

The report said that although Croatia's annual capacity was estimated between 11-15 million metric tons, only 2.2 millions tons of crude were ever transported through this pipeline section.

A series of tests with a team of international and independent monitors will be conducted in various weather conditions, using different types and grades crude.

MOL stated that they would "see what it takes to make the?Adria Pipeline a fully-fledged route".

DRUZHBA ERROR RAISES ADRIA RELIABILITY

MOL is already relying more on 'Adria, with the Druzhba Pipeline - which transports Russian crude oil and runs through Ukraine - being out of operation since the end January following what Ukraine claimed was a Russian Attack.

Hungarians and Slovaks have accused Kyiv for delaying the restoration. Ukraine has stated that repairs will take some time.

MOL asked JANAF during the outage to deliver Russian crude oil via 'the Adria route. But Croatia is assessing if it can do this 'legally because of sanctions.

MOL has said that, under EU sanctions exemptions for Hungary and Slovakia, they can source Russian crude by maritime routes in the event of an inoperative Druzhba Pipeline. (Reporting from Anita Komuves & Jason Hovet. Mark Potter edited the article.

(source: Reuters)