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Slovak refiner says no deal yet on Adria pipeline tests

Slovnaft, a Slovak refiner of oil, said that it still had not reached an agreement with Croatia regarding tests to determine if the Adria pipeline can carry enough oil for Hungary and Slovakia. Existing shipments have?enabled?it to increase production.

It is a new alternative route for oil to Slovakia and Hungary. This has been made more important by the Druzhba Pipeline, which runs through Ukraine and carries Russian crude.

Slovnaft, a unit of the Hungarian oil and gas group MOL, has been able to increase processing following a decline caused by Druzhba's outage. Chief Executive Gabriel Szabo said this in a televised news conference.

According to him, tests on the Adria Pipeline, including those in different?weather situations, are needed to determine if it has the capacity to serve both countries. Szabo stated that MOL and Croatian JANAF had agreed to begin testing in March. However, there was still disagreement over details.

SLOVNAFT SAYS THE REFINERY IS RUNNING NEAR CAPACITY

Slovnaft was forced to reduce production and borrow crude oil from the national reserves following the Druzhba shutdown, which Ukraine claims was caused by an attack on the pipeline by Russia in late January. Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskiy announced on Tuesday that Druzhba will be restarted before the end of April.

Slovnaft ?has since returned the borrowed crude thanks to shipments of seaborne non-Russian oil through the Adria and the 6-million-metric-ton-per-year refinery, which exports diesel to neighbouring countries, ?is now running near 100% capacity, Szabo said. Szabo stated that "we are running at 90% if not 100%, but our 'technical capacity' is limited because we must process crudes other than Russian."

He added that supplies to Slovnaft was also enabled by a?outage' at another MOL refinery, in Hungary after a fire. This limited the amount required through Adria.

Slovnaft is investing in 'technological changes' to exclusively use non-Russian oil blends by 2027. The European Union has plans to wean itself off Russian oil. However, Hungary and Slovakia objected and the European Commission delayed submitting legal proposals on the issue. (Reporting from Jan Lopatka in Prague and Jason Hovet; editing by Emelia Sithole Matarise)

(source: Reuters)