Russia | Slovakia |
|---|---|
| Diplomatic mission | |
| Embassy of Russia, Bratislava | Embassy of Slovakia, Moscow |
Russia–Slovakia relations (Russian:Российско-словацкие отношения,Slovak:Rusko-slovenské vzťahy) date back to when diplomatic relations were established upon Slovakia gaining its independence on January 1, 1993. Russia opened its embassy inBratislava in 1993. Slovakia also has an embassy inMoscow. Unlike Slovakia's neighbour and close allyCzech Republic, which has a negative view of Russia due to past events, Slovakia tends to have better relations with Russia.[1][2][3][4]


After theRussian invasion of Ukraine started, Slovakia, as one of the EU countries, imposed sanctions on Russia, and Russia added all EU countries to the list of "unfriendly nations".[5]
Slovakia joined other countries in spring 2022 indeclaring a number of Russian diplomatspersona non grata.
On 16 February 2023, Slovakia's parliament defined thePutin regime as "terrorist" and formally designated Russia as astate sponsor of terrorism.[6]
On 2 October 2023, Slovakia recognized rapprochement with Russia. On 25 October 2023,Robert Fico became the Prime Minister of Slovakia
On 20 January 2024, Slovakia's Culture Ministry said that Slovakia would resume cultural exchange with Russia andBelarus.
Fico met with Russian presidentVladimir Putin in December 2024 in Moscow to discuss primarily the transfer of Russian gas to Slovakia.[7] He become the third Western leader to do so since the war started.[8]
In 2021 Russia exported $6.05 billion of goods to Slovakia with natural gas being the main product. Slovakia exports were $1.98 billion with cars being the main product. Between 1995 and 2021 Russian exports have risen by an average of 8.14% p.a. whereas Slovakia’s exports rose by 7.19% p.a. on average.[9]
Slovakia is making plans on disconnecting from Russia's energy exports in accordance with EU decisions and sanctions following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[10] In April 2023 Minister of EnergyPeter Gerhardt dismissed Russian attempts to blackmail his country over energy supplies, although Russian crude, gas and nuclear fuel dominate the market in Slovakia. Gerhardt refused to cower over his country's support for Ukraine. 60 percent of its natural gas, 95 percent of its oil and all of its nuclear fuel are obtained by Slovakia from Russia. Slovakia’s main petroleum refinery was built to processUrals grade crude and thus “big investments” will be needed by it to accept other types of crude.[10]
In August 2023 the result of an international tender for the supply of nuclear fuel was won byWestinghouse.Rosatom was excluded from bidding.[11]
It was reported in May 2024 that Economy MinisterDenisa Saková saidRosatom would not be allowed to participate in a possible tender to build the next nuclear power plant in Slovakia, which generates over 50% of itselectricity at its existing nuclear plants.[12]
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