Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said Wednesday he would stop gas deliveries to Ukraine if Kyiv does not resume oil flows to Hungary.
Orbán, who has led his country since 2010, made the ultimatum ahead of Hungarian national elections in just two weeks’ time.
“Ukraine has been blocking the operation of the Druzhba oil pipeline for 30 days. We have so far successfully defended ourselves against Ukrainian pressure and blackmail,” Orbán said in a video posted on Facebook.
The announcement is the latest escalation in a dispute between Budapest and Kyiv that saw Orbán blocking the EU’s loan to Ukraine, while accusing the other side of stalling on the pipeline repairs. This comes at a moment when global energy prices are rising due to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, though Orbán stressed his country’s gas remains among the cheapest in Europe.
“To break the oil blockade and ensure Hungary’s secure energy supply, action is now needed. We will gradually halt gas shipments from Hungary to Ukraine and store the remaining gas domestically,” Orbán explained.
A complete stop to gas deliveries would hurt Ukraine, a country already facing energy shortages since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.
The Hungarian prime minister is in full campaign mode ahead of the April 12 election — and he seems to be feeling the heat from the opposition.
Orbán’s rival Péter Magyar of the pro-EU Tisza party is leading by around eight percentage points in surveys conducted in late February. At the latest EU summit in Brussels, Orbán accused EU institutions of backing his rival candidate.
The prime minister has made Russia’s war on Ukraine a central issue in his campaign, accusing Kyiv of delaying repairs to the Druzhba, or Friendship pipeline, which was significantly damaged by Moscow’s shelling.
Ukraine’s state-owned energy company Naftogaz did not immediately respond to POLITICO’s request for comment.
Júlia Vadler and Veronika Melkozerova contributed to this report.
