Investigate oil pipeline damage to unblock Ukraine funds, Orbán tells EU

By Gabriel Gavin | 02/27/2026 06:23 AM EST

Hungary and Slovakia are pushing for a fact-finding mission to determine whether the Druzhba pipeline can be repaired, correspondence shows.

Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban speaks during a news conference in Budapest, Hungary.

Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban speaks during a news conference in Budapest on Feb. 16. Pool photo by Alex Brandon

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán suggested he could drop his veto on the EU sending €90 billion to Kyiv if the EU assesses damage to an oil pipeline in Ukraine.

In a letter to European Council President António Costa dated Thursday, obtained by POLITICO, Orbán said he is “fully aware of the political difficulties” created by Budapest blocking the loan, which was agreed upon by all EU leaders at a summit in December.

Capitals have railed against Orbán for changing his mind after a Russian drone damaged the Druzhba pipeline, through which Hungary and Slovakia have continued to import discounted Russian crude oil throughout the four years of the war.

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Orbán claims Ukraine is slow-walking repairs to the pipeline and has vowed to veto the loan. Ukraine and top EU figures have denied that this is the case, saying the extent of the damage instead makes it difficult to get Druzhba back online.

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