Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Bulgaria seems not to be ready for another gas crisis

Photo: BGNES

Several days ago Russia again stopped its gas supplies to Ukraine, as it happened back in 2009, because Ukraine failed to pay a deposit. In return Ukraine banned the imports of Russian gas. However, Russia currently transits gas to the Central and Southeast Europe through Ukrainian territory. The President of Russian Gazprom Alexey Miller warned that Kiev’s refusal to buy Russian gas put the transit of that fuel to Europe at serious risk. However, Bulgaria, just like in 2009, is not prepared for such a scenario, although the country faced a series of energy problems back then and its central heating plants switched to coal two months after the start of the crisis. Now the authorities are trying to ease the tension stating that there are currently two gas pipelines in Ukraine: the one that transits gas to Europe and Bulgaria and a second one that supplies Ukraine with Russian gas. Analysts presume that Russia does not intend to reduce the gas supplies to Southeast Europe, because such deliveries bring steady money flow to the company which currently faces problems with the low prices of petrol. Bulgaria’s Energy Minister Temenuzhka Petkova calmed Bulgarian citizens down saying that the ministry’s analyses showed that currently there was no risk over the working regime of the national gas-transferring network.

However, Premier Borissov,  who is on official visit to China, is concerned about the lower pressure in the gas pipeline after the Russian sanction. Minister Petkova said on that occasion that the fluctuation in the gas pressure was something normal and that the pressure corresponded with the agreement between Russia and Bulgaria.

Although Bulgaria’s gas storage facility in Chiren is full almost to its maximum capacity and contains some 450 million cubic meters of gas, it can satisfy Bulgaria’s gas needs for a maximum of 100 odd days. The country’s gas consumption during the winter months varies between 8 and 10 million cubic meters per day. The truth is that despite the gas crisis in 2009 and the planned energy strategies, the progress in that field is meager. The authorities are talking about all types of gas pipeline projects and gas hubs, but little has been done on the construction of the gas interconnections with neighboring countries. In fact, several days ago the European Commission urged Bulgaria to speed up the construction of the trans-border gas pipelines financed with money from the EU budget. The Spokesperson of the European Commission for Climate Action and Energy Anna-Kaisa Itkonen announced that EC President Jean-Claude Juncker has been working vigorously on the modernization of the gas infrastructure of Central and Southeast Europe, so that each country can have in the future at least three different sources of gas. So far Bulgaria has only one source of gas supply- it imports Russian gas through Ukraine, just like in 2009, when the country was short of gas during the Ukrainian gas crisis.

English version: Kostadin Atanasov


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Daniel Mitov

GERB will seek a majority for a cabinet by formulating common goals

GERB will try to find a path to a majority for forming a government through the formulation of common goals, the party's Deputy Chairman Daniel Mitov said in an interview with BNR.  According to MP Daniel Mitov, the attempts to create a cordon sanitaire..

published on 11/10/24 2:45 PM
Nikolay Denkov

Nikolay Denkov: A "Peevski-wrapped GERB" leaves PP-DB in opposition

"A Peevski-wrapped GERB - we cannot work with this combination" - former Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov told journalists ahead of the We Continue the Change National Council meeting, adding that "we have already seen the result of this kind of work and..

published on 11/9/24 2:35 PM

Is Bulgaria heading for another election in an endless cycle?

For the seventh time in three years, Bulgarians went to the polls, and the results shed light on some of the behind-the-scenes manoeuvring. A seemingly minor detail in the counting of votes for the Velichie party, which missed the 4% threshold to enter..

published on 11/5/24 2:24 PM