has completed the construction of the LPG terminal in Tileagd includes 4 LPG tankers with a total storage capacity of 600 cubic meters 4 discharge/charge pumps connected to two compressors – designed for an annual capacity of up to 30kt The facility is equipped with a fully automatic computer-controlled charging system and complies with all regulations on occupational safety and the environment equipped with state-of-the-art safety and protection systems including automatic volume and temperature measuring devices as well as early detection and alarm sensors The terminal is also provided with a vapor recovery unit to reduce emissions of volatile organic compounds complying with the highest standards in the field The LPG terminal supplements the asset base that MOL already owns at Tileagd where a petroleum products storage facility the facility in Tileagd is operated by 22 employees The terminal is a key facility for LPG supply to the entire region being conceived to support the security of propane supply to customers in western Romania the terminal supplies LPG to MOL stations from the western north-western and central regions of the country as well as to the wholesale distribution partners in the same region It is estimated that the new facility will reach annual deliveries of 15kt in 2018 and 30kt by 2020 Each product category – propane or autogas – will be managed and processed through a system that includes individual discharge pumps from tank wagons compressors and pumps for loading in tanker trucks “We are very proud to inaugurate today the first LPG terminal built by MOL in Romania It is a project that represents a milestone in the long-term strategy of the company in order to continuously optimize our logistics chain and diversify our business activity as well as the portfolio of services to customers The investment increases access to LPG for current distributors in the region and enhances business opportunities and also access to this product for new small and medium-sized companies Together with the development and modernization of the network of filling stations optimizing the logistics chain is an important factor for increasing the economic efficiency of MOL Romania,” Camelia Ene Besides the petroleum products tank farm in Tileagd MOL Romania also manages a unit for the storage of petroleum products in Giurgiu which has direct access to river transport on the Danube was commissioned in the spring of 2013 and is operated by 14 employees has finished the construction of GPL terminal in Tileagd following the investment of EUR 2.3 million with a storage capacity of 600 cubic meters The terminal is spread on a surface of 10,000 sqm The installation has an automatized charging system. including automatized equipment measuring the volume and temperatures such as detection thermostat bulb and alarms,” according to the MOL Romania representatives The terminal has an installation of GPL supply to the entire region It is estimated that the new installation will reach annual of deliveries of 15 kt in 2018 and 30 kt until 2020. Besides the oil products storage from Tileagd MOL Romania also manages an unit of oil products storage in Giurgiu.The storage from Giurgiu with direct access to the transport on the Danube MOL Group is an international integrated company with the headquarter in Budapest with operations in over 30 countries, with approximately 25,000 employees worldwide. We use cookies for keeping our website reliable and secure providing social media features and to analyse how our website is used Gábor Mozga has been appointed as CEO of MOL Romania as of January 1 Camelia Ene ended her term as of December 31 and she will continue to build her career outside of MOL Group Camelia’s contributions have been essential in driving our growth I am truly grateful for her dedication and wish her the best of success in her future endeavors” MOL Romania is headquartered in Cluj-Napoca an administrative office in Arad and 258 employees MOL Romania was the first oil company to implement a loyalty program which now also offers a digital version through the MOL Go app The company has invested in the development of charging infrastructure for electric vehicle owners which can currently serve simultaneously 96 electric vehicles MOL Romania is an active member of its communities and invests in social responsibility programs in education In 2023 it launched the road education platform “You drive! Family comes first”, with the aim of drawing attention to traffic risks and promoting responsible behaviour. Family and friends trudged through the snow in Romania to bury Marioara yesterday AMID the crumbling shacks and four-foot piles of snow they brought Marioara Rostas the final yards on her long journey home When the Romanian teenager left her home village for Ireland four years ago her friends and neighbours prayed she would carve out a better life They might not have expected to see her again but none would have imagined that she would meet such a desperate end Within weeks of the Rostas family arriving in Dublin in December 2007 beginning four years of heartache that reached a bitter climax in the snow of Tileagd yesterday Three weeks after remains were found buried deep in the foothills of the Wicklow mountains Speaking through an interpreter to the Irish Independent fought back tears as he remembered his “angel girl” “I've cried almost every day but I never gave up hope But if God wanted her to die in this way then that is God's will “We were very poor when we arrived to Ireland in 2007 and we went there to beg on the streets I wanted a better life for me and my family I kept hoping my daughter would be found alive.” said: “I kept up hope that my daughter was alive but after a while I realised she was dead somewhere I just knew; I think it is a mother's intuition “I started to pray to God and asked him for her body to be found so that she could be brought back home.” Her hopes were shattered as her remains were dug out of a shallow grave a post-mortem confirming she died from a single gunshot wound Gardai believe she was held in a Dublin house against her will before her violent death Yesterday some of her meagre treasured possessions were placed in her coffin by her grief stricken parents The temperature dropped to minus 20 degrees as the family slowly lowered Marioara’s coffin into the ground Dimitri said: “I wanted her home as soon as possible because her place is with us.” Despite the harrowing death endured by their daughter the family insist they harbour no hate toward those who carried out the killing “I put my faith in justice and I believe justice will be served All my hopes lies in the hands of the Irish police “We will definitely return to Ireland when there is a court case I want to look into the eyes of the men who did this The Romanian Orthodox priest recited haunting graveside prayers as the snow fell steadily and the family huddled in the freezing temperatures Yesterday marked the beginning of healing process of sorts as the Roma gypsy community said a final farewell to Marioara A steady stream of sympathisers arrived from early morning to the family's dilapidated home It is located in a ‘gypsy ghetto' with a population of less than 200 people Just a few miles from the Hungarian border the entire town has a population of just 2,000 people The poverty from which the Rostas family fled was all around Local women held tightly on to babies who looked emaciated The family’s decision to move to Dublin in late 2007 was borne out of dire financial necessity – there simply was not enough money to feed 11 children ranging in age from 10 to 22 But the family soon left Ireland in grief after the harrowing loss of their daughter and endured a four-year wait for confirmation that she was dead Details of her fate only compounded their misery but at least they could come back to Dublin and prepare to bury their child Her father said: “My daughter is dead; there is nothing I can do to bring her back I wanted to give Roma friends we made in Dublin the chance to pay their respects There was a lot of emotion and crying – I'll never forget it She never went to school but her biggest dream was to have a family of her own and to have a husband and kids.” along with Sergeant Paul Murphy and Garda Ofelia Hough travelled from Ireland to attend the funeral to show their solidarity with the family “Being part of the investigation from the very start it was important for us to be present at her final resting place,” said Det Inspector Cryan Join the Irish Independent WhatsApp channel But key state witness in Marioara trial now has full immunity Members of An Garda Siochana bring flowers to the funeral mass of murdered victim Marioara Rostas in Tileagd Jim CusackSun 3 Aug 2014 at 03:30The key witness in the Marioara Rostas murder trial was given immunity for conspiring to murder a journalist it emerged at the end of last week's trial And the Sunday Independent can reveal that the witness was also overheard being ordered to murder a garda detective in a phone call intercepted by gardai O'Hanlon was reputedly offered €30,000 for each murder O'Hanlon cannot be charged with conspiracy to murder O'Hanlon received the call from a prisoner in Cloverhill Prison in July 2011 directing him to murder Sunday World journalist Mick McCaffrey after an article appeared shortly beforehand in the newspaper about a well-known Dublin criminal O'Hanlon has complete immunity and is still believed to be in Ireland It is understood attempts are now being made to encourage him to leave the country confronted with the wire-tap evidence about the conspiracy to murder the journalist and garda which included leading gardai to Marioara's body in return for immunity He told gardai he was not involved in the January 2008 abduction and murder but assisted only in the disposal of the body which gardai negotiated with the Director of Public Prosecutions he led gardai to the grave in the Sally Gap in January 2012 he was formally granted immunity two days into the Marioara murder trial from New Street in south inner-city Dublin was in Cloverhill Prison awaiting trial for a separate offence when he was charged with murdering Marioara He was sentenced to eight years' imprisonment last year for a meat cleaver and shotgun attack on a man in Blanchardstown in June 2009 He is appealing his conviction in this case No evidence of the conspiracy to murder the journalist and garda was given during the trial but in his summing up last Tuesday defence counsel Michael O'Higgins told the jury that among the "benefits" O'Hanlon received for agreeing to testify against Alan Wilson was immunity from a charge of conspiring "to murder a journalist" No mention was made of taped phone conversations from prison Gardai believe this mention of the journalist murder plot in Mr O'Higgins's summing up was key to copperfastening the already strong case mounted by the defence The month-long trial had heard about repeated instances of O'Hanlon's violent and erratic nature While in witness protection he had broken away from his garda minders had been on alcohol and drug binges and had wrecked three apartments and a hotel room The court heard he returned to Dublin and threatened members of Wilson's family including his former partner and mother of his two children He was eventually taken into protective custody in prison because of increasingly erratic behaviour The legal defence also raised strong suspicions over O'Hanlon's version of events in the murder The defence team showed a photofit image of the man who was seen driving Marioara away in a silver car It was suggested it bore a strong resemblance to O'Hanlon It was also shown he refused to take part in an identity parade at the time who was with her when she voluntarily got into the car which also tallied with O'Hanlon's complexion though admitted he had regular use of the car belonging to Alan Wilson The plot against the journalist and garda had been under way for three months when O'Hanlon was arrested in 2011 An accomplice had acquired addresses from the Land Registry He has not been charged with conspiracy either was given advice by gardai to increase security around his home and to be careful of his movements Colleagues of the detective said that no such advice was given to him as the threat was regarded as "part of the job" Gardai believe Marioara was murdered after she was caught making a brief call from a mobile phone which was left momentarily in a room at a house where she was being held It is believed her killer walked in on her seconds after she had called her brother It is believed he then shot her dead with four bullets to the head O'Hanlon gave evidence that he was shown the body in an upstairs bedroom in a house in Brabazon Street in Dublin 8 He then helped take Marioara to the mountains Both the house and an apartment in Clontarf where it is believed Marioara was also held were burned out and any evidence destroyed of slight build and around five feet six inches tall