Pakistan: six dead in an armed attack on the site of a Hungarian energy group

Six security personnel were killed in an armed attack on an oil and gas site in Pakistan owned by a Hungarian company. The attackers, suspected to be from the Pakistani Taliban group Tehreek-e-Taliban, used heavy and light weapons to carry out the attack.

Share:

Gain full professional access to energynews.pro from 4.90€/month.
Designed for decision-makers, with no long-term commitment.

Over 30,000 articles published since 2021.
150 new market analyses every week to decode global energy trends.

Monthly Digital PRO PASS

Immediate Access
4.90€/month*

No commitment – cancel anytime, activation in 2 minutes.

*Special launch offer: 1st month at the indicated price, then 14.90 €/month, no long-term commitment.

Annual Digital PRO Pass

Full Annual Access
99€/year*

To access all of energynews.pro without any limits

*Introductory annual price for year one, automatically renewed at 149.00 €/year from the second year.

Six security personnel at an oil and gas exploration site in Pakistan owned by a Hungarian company were killed Monday night by dozens of gunmen, local police said.

About 50 fighters attacked a site belonging to the Hungarian energy group MOL in the Hangu district of the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa around midnight Monday night, local police chief Asif Bahadur told AFP. “They were equipped with heavy and light weapons and fired mortar shells, killing six security personnel at the main entrance” to the remote site near the border with Afghanistan, Bahadur said.

The MOL group, from Hungary, said that none of its employees were on site at the time of the attack, whose death toll it confirmed. “Production from the wells has been temporarily shut down remotely and the wells are now secured, pending the completion of a regulatory site investigation,” he said. Four of the dead belonged to the Frontier Constabulary, a paramilitary police unit, and two were private security guards, police said.

“The exchange of gunfire lasted for more than an hour. The police forces forced the militants to flee,” Bahadur said. He blamed the assault on the Pakistani Taliban’s Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the most active armed Islamist group in the region. However, no one has claimed responsibility for the attack.

MOL has been operating in Pakistan since 1999 and employs 400 people in the country, according to its website. “We are assessing the information,” said a spokesman for the Hungarian embassy in Islamabad, noting that no diplomatic action was being considered. According to Bahadur, the attackers came from the neighboring North Waziristan district, historically one of the haunts of Islamist armed groups in the region.

After the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan by the United States and its NATO allies, the area has been the site of numerous Pakistani army offensives and U.S. drone attacks to drive out insurgents linked to the al-Qaeda network and the Taliban. Pakistan has been facing a deteriorating security situation for several months, particularly since the return of the Taliban to power in Kabul in August 2021, especially in the border regions with Afghanistan.

Most of the attacks are carried out by the TTP, a group distinct from the Afghan Taliban but driven by the same Islamist ideology. Pakistan blames the Afghan Taliban for allowing the TTP to plan its attacks from Afghan soil, which the TTP has consistently denied.

A sudden fault on the national grid cut electricity supply to several regions of Nigeria, reigniting concerns about the stability of the transmission system.
Re-elected president Irfaan Ali announces stricter production-sharing agreements to increase national economic returns.
Coal India issues tenders to develop 5 GW of renewable capacity, split between solar and wind, as part of its long-term energy strategy.
US utilities anticipate a rapid increase in high-intensity loads, targeting 147 GW of new capacity by 2035, with a strategic shift toward deregulated markets.
France opens a national consultation on RTE’s plan to invest €100 billion by 2040 to modernise the high-voltage electricity transmission grid.
Governor Gavin Newsom orders state agencies to fast-track clean energy projects to capture Inflation Reduction Act credits before deadlines expire.
Germany’s energy transition could cost up to €5.4tn ($6.3tn) by 2049, according to the main industry organisation, raising concerns over national competitiveness.
Facing blackouts imposed by the authorities, small businesses in Iran record mounting losses amid drought, fuel shortages and pressure on the national power grid.
Russian group T Plus plans to stabilise its electricity output at 57.6 TWh in 2025, despite a decline recorded in the first half of the year, according to Chief Executive Officer Pavel Snikkars.
In France, the Commission de régulation de l’énergie issues a clarification on ten statements shared over the summer, correcting several figures regarding tariffs, production and investments in the electricity sector.
A group of 85 researchers challenges the scientific validity of the climate report released by the US Department of Energy, citing partial methods and the absence of independent peer review.
Five energy infrastructure projects have been added to the list of cross-border renewable projects, making them eligible for financial support under the CEF Energy programme.
The Tanzanian government launches a national consultation to accelerate the rollout of compressed natural gas, mobilising public and private financing to secure energy supply and lower fuel costs.
The Kuwaiti government has invited three international consortia to submit bids for the first phase of the Al Khairan project, combining power generation and desalination.
Nigeria’s state-owned oil company abandons plans to sell the Port Harcourt refinery and confirms a maintenance programme despite high operating costs.
The publication of the Multiannual Energy Programme decree, awaited for two years, is compromised by internal political tensions, jeopardising strategic investments in nuclear and renewables.
The US Energy Information Administration reschedules or cancels several publications, affecting the availability of critical data for oil, gas and renewables markets.
Brazilian authorities have launched a large-scale operation targeting a money laundering system linked to the fuel sector, involving investment funds, fintechs, and more than 1,000 service stations across the country.
A national study by the Davies Group reveals widespread American support for the simultaneous development of both renewable and fossil energy sources, with strong approval for natural gas and solar energy.
The South Korean government compels ten petrochemical groups to cut up to 3.7 million tons of naphtha cracking per year, tying financial and tax support to swift and documented restructuring measures.

Log in to read this article

You'll also have access to a selection of our best content.