Druzhba oil flows resume, clearing path for €90B Ukraine loan

By Milena Wälde, Gregorio Sorgi | 04/24/2026 07:01 AM EDT

Hungary and Slovakia tied their support for the deal to the resumption of crude deliveries to their territory.

General views of the Slovnaft refinery in Bratislava, Slovakia.

The Slovnaft refinery in Bratislava is pictured April 1. Robert Nemeti/Getty Images

Oil is moving again through the Druzhba pipeline — clearing the final hurdle to unlock the European Union’s €90 billion loan for Ukraine.

Shipments resumed early Thursday, with crude starting to reach Slovakia after nearly three months of disruption triggered by a Russian strike in January on the pipeline’s Ukrainian section.

Slovakia’s Economy Minister Denisa Saková confirmed the restart. “As of 2:00 a.m. today, the intake of oil into Slovakia via the Druzhba pipeline has resumed,” she wrote on Facebook. “Oil deliveries are currently proceeding in line with the agreed plan.”

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A Hungarian official, granted anonymity to speak freely, told POLITICO that Russian oil reached Hungary at 12:55 Thursday. Hungary had initially requested a delay to the EU’s technical briefing on the loan announcement until the delivery was confirmed.

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