The European Commission's 29 April infringements package included a reasoned opinion against Hungary over MOL's use of Energy Charter Treaty Article 26 investor-state arbitration against EU member states 1. The reasoned opinion is the second separate infringement proceeding touching Hungary in the same package, alongside Hungary's broader exposure across the week's regulatory file.
MOL is the Hungarian multinational oil and gas company, state-affiliated, operator of the Százhalombatta refinery and the principal Hungarian crude buyer on the Druzhba pipeline that restarted on 22 April. Energy Charter Treaty Article 26 is the investor-state dispute mechanism the Commission has formally argued cannot be used between EU member states following the Achmea and Komstroy judgments at the Court of Justice. the Commission's position is that intra-EU ECT arbitration is incompatible with EU law; Hungary's failure to prevent MOL's Article 26 cases is the conduct the reasoned opinion targets.
The MOL infringement lands on a politically shifted baseline. Hungary's 12 April parliamentary election delivered Péter Magyar as the new Hungarian leader, on a platform that included releasing the EUR 90 billion EU-Ukraine loan facility from Hungarian blocking, which Magyar delivered the same week (covered separately in this briefing). The MOL infringement, the Druzhba restart, the windfall debate the five finance ministers raised in their letter to Wopke Hoekstra and Hungary's reported blocking of the full maritime services ban in the 20th sanctions package now all sit on the same shifted political terrain.
MOL faces procedural exposure first. The reasoned opinion starts a two-month clock for Hungary to respond, after which Brussels can take Budapest to Luxembourg. If the case reaches Luxembourg and Hungary loses, the Commission gains precedent for treating future intra-EU ECT arbitration as itself a Treaty breach by the host state, beyond any liability of the corporate claimant. That tightens Brussels' enforcement perimeter on a framework the Commission has argued has no legal force inside the bloc since the Achmea ruling but which has continued in practice through cases like MOL's. EU energy investment dispute resolution now turns on whether reasoned opinions of this kind survive Member State response.
