According to Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó, the route change is good news.
“As rail transportation through Ukraine and air transportation through northern Central Europe became impossible, a new solution was required,” he wrote on his social media page.
The fuel arrived by sea in Bulgaria, where it was loaded onto a train and transported through Romania to Hungary. On December 22, the fuel was unloaded at the nuclear power plant. The volume is enough to operate the station for several months.
Hungary demanded from the EU countries not to include Russian nuclear energy in the next package of sanctions. Together with Russia, the country is building the Paks-2 nuclear power plant.