The Adriatic Pipeline Will Not yet Cover the Needs of Hungary and Slovakia. Tests Have Not Confirmed This, Reports Oil Giant Mol
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Péter Szijjártó accused the Croatians of being greedy for profit after the Croatian company Janaf claimed on Wednesday that the tests were not their fault, but Mol's. Mol and Janaf have conducted joint tests on the Adria oil pipeline on several occasions to see if it could replace the Barátság oil pipeline. Mol said that the Croatian section of the Adria oil pipeline is not yet capable of transporting sufficient amounts of oil to Hungary and Slo…
The Hungarian group MOL and Janaf (Croatia) announce that they carried out several joint tests on the Adria pipeline last week, but the latest results show that this pipeline cannot transport sufficient volumes of crude oil from the Adriatic Sea to Hungary and Slovakia in the long term. “MOL and Janaf carried out several tests last week […] The article Adria pipeline, which connects the Adriatic Sea with Hungary and Slovakia, failed pressure tes…
Budapest - Tests have not yet confirmed that the Adria pipeline in the Adriatic Sea will be able to sufficiently cover the needs of Hungary and Slovakia in the long term, press agencies reported, citing the Hungarian energy company MOL. MOL has been testing the pipeline since September together with the Croatian operator JANAF. Budapest and Bratislava are currently dependent on Russian oil supplied by the Druzhba pipeline.
According to the Minister of Foreign Affairs and MOL, the Adria pipeline, which could be considered as an alternative route for oil imports, has been tested in recent weeks, but its capacity is insufficient, and Hungary cannot separate itself from the Russian Friendship.
Tests have not yet confirmed that the Adria pipeline will be able to sufficiently cover the needs of Hungary and Slovakia in the long term. Press agencies reported this today, citing Hungarian energy company MOL. MOL has been testing the pipeline together with Croatian operator JANAF since September. Budapest and Bratislava are now dependent on Russian oil supplied by the Druzhba pipeline. MOL said the joint tests will last several months. Their…
Last week, Mol and Janaf conducted several joint tests on the Adria crude oil pipeline, but according to a Mol statement, the latest results do not yet prove that the pipeline would be able to bring sufficient quantities of crude oil from the Adriatic Sea for Hungary and Slovakia in the long term. During the tests, the pipeline was not able to operate at adequate capacity for more than 1-2 hours.
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