All news

Poland set to halve Russian oil imports via Druzhba pipeline in February — Bloomberg

The Polish oil company Orlen said that 90% of the crude oil it refines at its refineries will now come from suppliers other than Russia

WARSAW, February 3. /TASS/. Poland intends to halve Russian oil imports via the Druzhba pipeline in February, Bloomberg reported on Friday, citing sources.

"Flows are planned at about 220,000 tons in February - roughly 58,000 barrels a day - down from 500,000 tons in January," the agency wrote.

Such a sharp decline is because Poland’s state-controlled oil refiner Orlen decided not to renew a contract with Russia oil company Rosneft that ended last month. The other contract with Tatneft is still valid, the agency said.

The Polish company told Bloomberg that 90% of the crude oil it refines at its refineries will now come from suppliers other than Russia.

In January, Orlen's contract with Rosneft expired, which provided for the supply of up to 300,000 tons of crude per month. Orlen's contract with Tatneft, which was concluded for 200,000 tons of oil per month, expires in December 2024. Orlen delivers Russian oil through pipelines. Warsaw refused to purchase oil from Russia by sea after the start of a special military operation in Ukraine. Poland intends to replace Russian oil with oil from the United States, the regions of the Persian Gulf and the North Sea.