Wednesday, January 28, 2026

 Serbia Says Russia Ready To Sell Stake In NIS

Serbia’s president has confirmed that Russia is prepared to sell its controlling stake in the country’s only oil refinery and that Hungary’s MOL has been discussed as a potential buyer, as sanctions pressure continues to squeeze Russian-owned downstream assets in Europe.

President Aleksandar Vucic said talks are underway over the future ownership of Naftna Industrija Srbije (NIS), which operates the Pancevo refinery, according to remarks reported by Hungary Today. Vucic said Moscow now sees a sale of its stake as beneficial under current sanctions conditions and acknowledged that MOL has featured in those discussions.

NIS is majority owned by Gazprom Neft, which holds just over 56% of the company, while the Serbian government owns around 30%. The ownership structure has become increasingly problematic as sanctions complicate access to financing, insurance, and international banking services for Russian-controlled energy assets operating inside Europe.

Russian officials and industry figures view a divestment of the Gazprom Neft stake as a way to preserve refinery operations and asset value by shifting control to a non-sanctioned regional operator. Unlike upstream assets, refineries such as Pancevo face immediate exposure to sanctions-related constraints on crude procurement, product exports, and working capital, making continued Russian ownership increasingly difficult.

The Pancevo refinery has a processing capacity of roughly 4.8 million tonnes per year and supplies most of Serbia’s domestic fuel demand, with additional flows into neighboring Balkan markets. Serbian officials have repeatedly stressed that uninterrupted operation of the facility is a national priority, elevating ownership decisions to the state level.

Vucic said the issue is politically sensitive and tied to Serbia’s broader effort to balance long-standing energy ties with Russia against the practical realities of operating critical infrastructure within a sanctions-constrained European market. Hungary, which has maintained energy cooperation with Moscow while navigating EU sanctions, is viewed in Belgrade as a possible counterparty capable of keeping the refinery commercially viable.

Pressure on Russian downstream assets has already intensified elsewhere in Europe. Lukoil has seen parts of its refining and retail networks placed under special administration or government oversight in several countries, reinforcing the risks facing similar Russian-controlled assets in the region.

No agreement, valuation, or timeline has been disclosed. Vucic said discussions remain ongoing and that any decision on NIS will be guided by fuel supply security and operational continuity rather than political symbolism.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

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