May 27, 2026
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Croatia Hails Arbitration Case Win Against Hungary’s MOL Over Gas Dispute

MOL petrol station in Budapest, Hungary. Croatia has prevailed against the Hungarian oil company MOL in commercial arbitration, the Croatian State Attorney’s Office announced on Tuesday, after the Int

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ManyPress Editorial Team

ManyPress Editorial

May 27, 2026 · 1:04 PM3 min readSource: Balkan Insight (BIRN)
Croatia Hails Arbitration Case Win Against Hungary’s MOL Over Gas Dispute

MOL petrol station in Budapest, Hungary. Croatia has prevailed against the Hungarian oil company MOL in commercial arbitration, the Croatian State Attorney’s Office announced on Tuesday, after the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, ICSID, rejected all of MOL’s claims and ordered it to pay Croatia 775,000 euros in legal costs, plus interest. After MOL filed a claim with ICSID, the Hungarian oil company in July 2022 was directed to pursue its claim through commercial arbit

MOL then opened commercial arbitration proceedings against Croatia in 2023. MOL claimed that Croatia had violated the Agreement and the First Amendment to that agreement, seeking damages in the amount of 36,152,485 euros. The tribunal rejected MOL’s claim in its entirety. Croatia’s Economy Minister Ante Susnjar welcomed the ruling. “I congratulate the State Attorney’s Office on conducting a high-quality process and protecting Croatian interests. It is time for the co-owners of INA [Croatia’s oil company] to focus on what is truly important – the company’s development, new investments and production growth,” the minister said. MOL attempted to prove that Croatia had violated the annexes to the 2003 share purchase agreement under which MOL acquired a 25 per cent stake plus one share in INA, along with management rights over the oil company, which had previously been state-owned. The annexes, signed in 2009 and commonly referred to as the “gas agreements,” concern the liberalisation of the gas market. Relations between Hungary and Croatia have been strained for more than a decade over the relationship between MOL and INA, particularly after Croatian courts ruled that MOL had acquired management rights in INA through corruption. Specifically, the courts found that former Croatian Prime Minister Ivo Sanader had been bribed by Zsolt Hernadi , the chairman of MOL’s management board. Despite an arrest warrant being issued for Hernadi, Hungary has refused to extradite him and Hungarian courts have not recognised the Croatian rulings. “Croatia needs an INA that produces, an INA that invests, and an INA that strengthens its role in the region’s energy security.

Key points

  • MOL then opened commercial arbitration proceedings against Croatia in 2023.
  • MOL claimed that Croatia had violated the Agreement and the First Amendment to that agreement, seeking damages in the amount of 36,152,485 euros.
  • The tribunal rejected MOL’s claim in its entirety.
  • Croatia’s Economy Minister Ante Susnjar welcomed the ruling.
  • “I congratulate the State Attorney’s Office on conducting a high-quality process and protecting Croatian interests.

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This article was independently rewritten by ManyPress editorial AI from reporting originally published by Balkan Insight (BIRN).

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