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Minister: Serbia's sole oil refinery can only run until November 25, without any new crude supply

The only refinery in Serbia will only continue to operate until November 25, as new crude oil deliveries have been stopped due to U.S. sanction against the Russian-owned plant operator NIS. This was reported by Tanjug News Agency on Wednesday, citing the energy minister.

NIS, of which Gazprom, Gazprom and the Serbian Government each own 44.9%, operates the only refinery in Serbia, located in Pancevo.

The Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Treasury placed initial sanctions on Russia's petroleum sector on 10 January and gave Gazprom a 45-day deadline to sell its NIS holdings.

The sanctions had been delayed several times and came into force on October 8th. The banks have ceased processing NIS payments, and Croatia's JANAF crude oil pipeline has halted supplying crude to NIS.

Tanjug reported that Serbian Energy minister Dubravka Handanovic told an official of the International Monetary Fund after meeting him, that the Balkan nation has sufficient reserves to ensure stability on its market.

Djedovic handanovic stated that "our mandatory and commodity reserve are full as well as NIS storage facilities to prevent any disruptions on the markets."

She stated that sanctions against Russia’s Lukoil which operates in Serbia, as well as the recent fire at Hungary’s MOL refinery are further complicating Serbia’s oil and derivatives market by affecting imports.

Every day, we talk to the oil companies in our market regarding the current state of the market and the challenges. We also discuss the security of supply. "We are increasing imports of oil derivatives despite the various transportation and logistical restrictions of derivatives."

In an earlier statement, Aleksandar Vucic, the President of Serbia, said that without new crude oil supplies, NIS' Pancevo plant, which has a capacity of 4.8 millions tons annually and meets most of Serbian needs, will have to cease operations after November 1. Ivana Skularac, Mark Heinrich, and Cynthia Osterman edited the report.

(source: Reuters)