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Report: Serbia's NIS refinery ceases operations due to U.S. sanctions

The NOVA.RS TV in Belgrade reported that the operations at Serbia's Russian owned NIS oil refinery had ceased due to a shortage of crude oil. This is the latest indication that U.S. sanction on the project may threaten fuel supplies throughout the Balkan nation.

NIS officials and the Serbian government declined comment. In January, the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Treasury Department placed sanctions on Russia’s oil sector, including NIS. NIS is owned in majority by Russia’s Gazprom and Gazprom. US repeatedly granted NIS waivers until the sanctions came into force in October.

The banks then stopped processing NIS and Croatia's JANAF

JANF.ZA

The pipeline has halted crude oil deliveries to refineries.

Serbia has scrambled to find alternative fuels for the winter since then.

Serbian government said on Monday that it

has sufficient fuel

Reserves to supply the domestic markets. NOVA reported that on Tuesday the refinery stopped working due to a shortage of crude oil. This means it won't be able produce any more gasoline, jet fuel, or diesel.

The news was confirmed by a refinery source. NOVA and a source confirmed that the refinery has fuel in storage.

Dugravka Djedovic Handanovic, the energy minister, said that NIS reserves, including all reserves held with NIS, totaled 89,825 tons of diesel, and 53,648 tonnes of gasoline. She said that the government approved the importation of 38,000 tons of petrol and 66,000 tonnes of diesel to be stored in state reserves.

Gazprom holds 44.9% and Gazprom GAZP.MM 11,3% of NIS. Serbia holds 29.9% of NIS, and the rest is held by small investors.

Washington wants NIS to divest of all Russian assets and has given its owners three months in which to find a buyer for the Russian stake.

(source: Reuters)