Europe: Gas prices hit...

Following the August 15 meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, and Trump’s...

Region: Electricity prices drop...

In Week 34 of 2025, electricity market prices declined across most South East...

Romania: End of price...

Electricity bills for July and part of August 2025 in Romania are significantly...

Bosnia and Herzegovina sees...

According to the Agency for Statistics of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), gross electricity...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsHungary: MOL Group...

Hungary: MOL Group Q2 2025 profit falls 56%, launches “Tomorrow Downstream” program to boost efficiency

MOL Group reported a profit before tax of 236 million dollars in Q2 2025, representing a 56% year-on-year decline. While a softer regional macroeconomic environment weighed on results, strong upstream volumes, robust downstream throughput, and growing consumer services activity helped mitigate the impact. Based on first-half performance, management maintained its full-year 2025 guidance but noted increased external risk volatility compared to February.

Upstream earnings declined quarter-on-quarter as both oil and gas prices fell by double digits. Group production averaged 93.5 million barrels of oil equivalent per day in Q2, near the top of the 92-94 million range, slightly down due to weaker international assets. MOL signed key agreements with SOCAR to enter onshore exploration in Azerbaijan’s Shamakhi-Gobustan area as operator with a 65% stake, supporting long-term resource diversification.

Downstream operations delivered decade-high production and sales volumes but recorded lower year-on-year results due to price pressures and narrower margins. Petrochemicals remained loss-making amid subdued demand. To boost resilience, MOL launched the “Tomorrow Downstream” program, aiming for 500 million dollars of annual improvements beyond 2027. This initiative seeks to offset tougher macroeconomic conditions and raise downstream’s strategic EBITDA target by an additional 200 million dollars above the current 1.2 billion dollar goal through efficiency gains, asset upgrades, and new measures not yet reflected in the strategy.

Consumer Services continued its growth trajectory across both fuel and non-fuel segments despite challenging core markets. Fuel margins notably improved in Romania and Croatia. Circular Economy Services reported a negative EBITDA of 10 million dollars due to seasonally higher operating costs.

Gas Midstream EBITDA declined year-on-year, reflecting a lower tariff environment despite steady transmission demand.

Strategically, MOL is enhancing cooperation with partners in Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan to expand upstream opportunities and diversify crude sources.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Europe: Gas prices hit 2025 low amid high storage levels and strong LNG supply

Following the August 15 meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, and Trump’s subsequent conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, European gas prices fell to a new low for 2025 as markets anticipated a possible easing of geopolitical tensions....

Region: Electricity prices drop across most of SEE in late August 2025 as demand and renewable output decline

In Week 34 of 2025, electricity market prices declined across most South East European (SEE) countries compared to Week 30 (21–27 July 2025), with all markets moving to weekly average prices below €100/MWh except for Italy, which recorded the...

Slovenia: Wind Energy Association calls for balanced policy consultation

The Slovenian Wind Energy Association (GIZ) has expressed concern that recent political debates on wind energy are being shaped by what it views as an unbalanced event. The association says conclusions from a June consultation in the National Council—attended...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!