US Sanctions โPressure Serbia to Reduce Reliance on โRussian Oil
BELGRADE – Serbia isโ moving to reduce its โdependence on Russian oil as Western sanctions begin to impact energy transactions, possibly reshaping theโค country’s energy sector and raising concerns about fuel availability. โThe Serbian government โคreportedly plansโ to repurchase shares of Naftna โฃIndustrija Srbijeโ (NIS), the country’s dominant oil and โgas โคcompany, โcurrently majority-owned by Russianโ state-owned โfirms, with a possible future resaleโ contingent on an improvement in Russia‘s international standing. โข
The move comes as Serbian citizens already experience the initial consequences of sanctions imposed โon Russia โคfollowing its invasion of Ukraine. Visa, Mastercard, and American Express transactions are now blocked at NIS and Gazprom-branded gas stations within Serbia,โฃ signaling a tangible disruption toโฃ everyday life. While Serbia currently avoids an energy bottleneck, anxieties are growing โขamong โthe population, recalling the fuel shortagesโ experienced during โthe conflicts of the 1990s.
NIS, a crucial component of Serbia’s energy infrastructure, isโฃ currently majority-owned by Russian companies.The planned serbianโค state buyback aims to shiftโฃ ownership away from Russian control, though officials have indicated a willingness to revisit the arrangement should geopolitical โconditions change. The exact timeline and โฃfinancial details of the share repurchase remain undisclosed.โข
The situation underscoresโ Serbia’s complex relationship with Russia, a long-standing political and economic partner. Despite formally condemning russia’s โขaggression in โคUkraine at โขthe โunited Nations, Belgrade has refrained โฃfrom joining Westernโ sanctions, aโ position โคthat โฃhas โdrawn criticismโ from the United Statesโข and โฃEuropean union. The disruption of payment โคprocessing at Russian-owned gas stations demonstrates the indirect impact of sanctions, even โwithout direct Serbian participation.