BUDAPEST - What’s the state of Hungary’s energy transition, and where do the two main competing parties stand on climate and energy policy?
Hungarians will head to the polls on 12 April in elections that could end prime minister Viktor Orbán's 16 consecutive years in power – and potentially shake up the political landscape entirely, with polls indicating that only Orbán’s Fidesz and Péter Magyar's conservative Tisza movement may clear the parliamentary threshold, leaving all other parties without representation.
Clean Energy Wire CLEW invites journalists to a webinar to better understand the stakes in this election and the competing parties’ positions on questions such as nuclear power, the country’s blocking of EU climate initiatives, and its push to become a major electric vehicle battery producer.
This webinar is supported by Journalismfund Europe.