Naftogaz receives UAH 12.6 bln of net profit in Q1 2021 – group's financial director
According to the results of January-March 2021, NJSC Naftogaz Ukrainy received a net profit of UAH 12.6 billion, which is almost four times more than in the first quarter of last year (UAH 3.2 billion), said the Group's Chief Financial Officer Peter van Driel.
"We previously stated that we expect Naftogaz to be profitable in the first quarter. I am pleased to announce that net profit in the first quarter of 2021 is UAH 12.6 billion (unaudited preliminary result, which is subject to further verification)," he wrote on his Facebook page.
The business environment is showing clear signs of recovery with higher prices and greater demand than last year, he said.
"The expected result shows our resilience: profitability has improved for three quarters in a row. Our transformation efforts are paying off. The Naftogaz team has stepped up this quarter and showed an outstanding result! I want to thank everyone for their great contribution," he said.
Advertising
Advertising
MORE ABOUT
Naftogaz restores over 50% of gas production lost in Feb attacks
13:05, 10.04.2025
Naftogaz joins Ukrainian Network of Integrity and Compliance UNIC
16:52, 07.04.2025
Naftogaz receives 150 MW gas piston units, other energy equipment from Norwegian govt, UNDP
19:38, 26.03.2025
Naftogaz denies NABU, SAPO accusations of inaction in returning assets to Ukraine
16:43, 22.03.2025
Naftogaz buys another almost 100 mcm of LNG from ORLEN
14:33, 18.03.2025
LATEST
Forests of Ukraine to invest UAH 20 mln in restoration of 10,000 ha of 'collective farm' forests in Rivne region in 2025
18:58, 16.04.2025
Nearly 73 mln tonnes of grain exported via Ukrainian maritime route – Kuleba
09:29, 16.04.2025
Transition to project-based financing could increase investment security in housing in Ukraine – expert
15:17, 15.04.2025
Ukrainian govt approves bill to strengthen energy companies' responsibility for energy security
13:59, 15.04.2025
Ukraine's Ukrnafta oil company trains its own ai models using 65 years of oil and gas data