The exemption talk comes just as Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy vowed to halt Russian oil shipments to Hungary through the Druzhba pipeline, saying the flow “will disappear from Europe” as Kyiv moves to stop Russia’s war financing via energy exports. Hungary’s top refiner MOL, however, says it can already source up to 80% of its crude from non-Russian suppliers, which is a dramatic shift from two years ago when it argued diversification was impossible.
Hungary currently relies on Russian crude for about 86% of its oil supply, and its refineries were built to handle Russia’s Urals blend. Transitioning feedstock means costly reconfigurations and higher input prices, but MOL’s latest statement hints that it has quietly made more progress than Budapest has publicly admitted. If true, the claim undermines Orbán’s narrative that sanctions relief is essential for Hungary’s energy security.
For the oil market, an exemption would have limited immediate impact on physical flows as Druzhba supplies are relatively small in global terms. But it could set a dangerous precedent. If Hungary wins special treatment, others dependent on Russian barrels, such as Slovakia, may demand the same. That would erode the sanctions regime’s credibility and further blur the lines between geopolitics and energy pragmatism.
Credit: Oilprice.com


