The EU has backed Hungary and Slovakia in demanding that Ukraine fixes the Druzhba pipeline, as Kyiv accepted the bloc’s offer of technical support and funding to restore the Soviet-era link.
A senior Brussels official said on Tuesday that the EU supports the continued operation of the pipeline, which carries Russian crude oil to central Europe, under the existing rules.
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Earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy moved to deescalate mounting tensions by accepting the EU’s help, although he signalled that any resumption of supplies was still weeks away.
Tensions between Kyiv and two of its neighbours, Hungary and Slovakia, have grown over the outage on the pipeline, which crosses Ukrainian territory and supplies both countries — the only EU member states still importing Russian oil.
The clash has left officials in Brussels in the strange position of having to defend the renewed use of the pipeline, at the same time as it is advocating a definite phase-out of Russian energy imports.
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