Ad
Hungary's prime minister Viktor Orban (l) concluded a deal with Russian president Vladimir Putin (r) in January 2014 on the nuclear plant Paks II without a public tender (Photo: kremlin.ru)

Investigation

Commission still silent on Hungarian nuclear contract

The European Commission is dragging its feet in sharing reasons why it gave a green light to the Paks II nuclear plant project in Hungary and why vice-president Guenther Oettinger travelled with a lobbyist working for the Hungarian government.

In November last year, the EU executive ended an infringement procedure against Hungary over an alleged non-compliance with EU public procurement rules when the contract to extend the Paks plant was awarded to Russia's Rosatom.

It cited "te...

Get EU news that matters

Back our independent journalism by becoming a supporting member

Already a member? Login here

Author Bio

Eszter Zalan is a Hungarian journalist who worked for Brussels-based news portal EUobserver specialising in European politics, focusing on populism and Brexit.

Hungary's prime minister Viktor Orban (l) concluded a deal with Russian president Vladimir Putin (r) in January 2014 on the nuclear plant Paks II without a public tender (Photo: kremlin.ru)

Tags

Author Bio

Eszter Zalan is a Hungarian journalist who worked for Brussels-based news portal EUobserver specialising in European politics, focusing on populism and Brexit.

Ad

Related articles

Ad