Gas deliveries continue to flow to Hungary on schedule, without obstructions and according to the country’s long-term contract with Russia, Péter Szijjártó, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, said on Wednesday, commenting on news reports that Russia had stopped deliveries to Poland and Bulgaria.
Some 3.5 billion cubic meters of gas arrive in Hungary via Turkey, Bulgaria and Serbia every year, which is a “significant” portion of the country’s annual consumption, Szijjarto said in a post on Facebook.
While Russia has stopped delivering the gas intended for consumption in Bulgaria, transits are untouched by the measure, he said.
“I would like to put everyone’s mind at ease: the suspension of deliveries to Bulgaria does not include transits across the country,”
he said.
Meanwhile, Russian state-owned energy company Gazprom has decided to request payments in roubles, in view of the sanctions hitting Russia due to the war in Ukraine. “We have found a solution where [Hungary] will pay in euros to an account set up at Gazprom Bank, which will then exchange it to roubles and transfer it to Gazprom Export,” Szijjártó said.
Slovakia has chosen the same method of payment, according to a statement of the Slovak economy minister on Tuesday, Szijjártó said.
Read alsoBreaking – Russian plane carrying dangerous cargo landed in Hungary again!
Source: MTI
please make a donation here
Hot news
Rammstein’s Till Lindemann to rock Budapest in 2025
Hungarian EU enlargement commissioner: Ten years of enlargement advances achieved in a single term
Serbia’s big energy move: Partnering with Hungary’s Paks Nuclear Plant
Orbán cabinet: Improving competitiveness cornerstone of Hungary’s EU presidency
Top Hungary news: Olympics in Budapest, Russian gas, Hungary’s debt, new Müller store, Prince William as landlord, expensive panel flats – 18 November, 2024
Hungarian FM: Suspending EU-Israel political dialogue ‘would be mistake’
1 Comment
The Bulgarian PM has said on TV today that Bulgaria is reviewing the transit contract for Russian gas so Péter Pipsqueak should not get too big for his very expensive designer boots. That pipeline supplies Serbia and Hungary.