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Russia’s oil giant Lukoil, which is under U.S. sanctions, has announced that it has reached an agreement with the American private equity firm Carlyle to sell its foreign assets, AFP reported.
In a statement, Lukoil said it had “entered into an agreement with the U.S. investment company Carlyle for the sale of Lukoil International GmbH.” The company уточни that the deal does not include assets located in Kazakhstan.
According to analysts cited by Reuters, Lukoil’s overseas assets are valued at approximately billion. These include four subsidiaries in Bulgaria, among them the Neftochim Burgas refinery and Lukoil’s nationwide fuel station network.
Lukoil stressed that the agreement is non-exclusive and subject to a number of preliminary conditions, including obtaining all required regulatory approvals. Among them is authorization from the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) for the transaction with Carlyle.
In October 2025, the United States, the European Union, and the United Kingdom placed Lukoil on a sanctions list, forcing the company’s management to urgently seek buyers for its international assets. On January 15, OFAC extended the license allowing the sale of Lukoil’s foreign assets until February 28.
The U.S. imposed sanctions on Lukoil and Russia’s largest oil producer Rosneft last year, citing the lack of progress in peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine. The move was part of efforts by U.S. President Donald Trump to pressure Moscow into agreeing to a peace deal to end the conflict in Ukraine, described as the deadliest war in Europe since World War II.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury has already blocked two previous attempts to sell Lukoil’s overseas assets: a proposed deal with Swiss trading group Gunvor in October and a share-swap transaction organized by Xtellus Partners, the former U.S. unit of Russia’s VTB Bank, in December.
Bulgaria’s fuel market has recorded a sharp upward shift since the outbreak of the war in Iran, with diesel and petrol prices rising significantly across the country
The second exploration drilling in the Krum-1 area of the Khan Asparuh block in Bulgaria’s Black Sea has also failed to identify commercially significant natural gas deposits, according to OMV Petrom
The Ombudswoman institution has voiced strong opposition to the proposed increase in heating prices in Sofia, which is expected to approach nearly 30 percent
The Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (EWRC) in Bulgaria has set the price of natural gas for April 2026 at 34.27 euros per megawatt-hour, excluding access, transmission, excise duties and VAT
Fuel prices in Bulgaria have recorded a sharp upward movement over the past month, with diesel showing the most significant increase, according to data from the Fuelo platform
Bulgargaz has defended its previously submitted proposal for a 5% rise in natural gas prices for April before the Energy and Water Regulatory Commission, with CEO Veselin Sinabov stressing that there is currently no justification for any further increases
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