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

Bulgarian wine producers report high production volumes this year

Photo: BGNES

Vine growers harvested high-quality grapes this year thanks to the dry summer and the rainy spring. However, wine connoisseurs will have to wait a bit more, because this year’s produce will be on the market next spring.

“Fortunately, Bulgarians continue to drink wine, despite the current crisis. They only started to buy slightly cheaper products. Boxed wine sells extremely well” – said Yordan Chorbadzhiyski, Chairman of the National Vine and Wine Chamber.


“We have witnessed a decrease in sales volumes in the higher price segments- between EUR 7 and 13. Hopefully, consumption will increase after the coronavirus pandemic. Currently, people mainly buy wines that cost around EUR 5 per bottle. Merlot and Cabernet are the most popular red wines and Sauvignon Blanc is the most popular white variety. Consumers also show big interest in rosé wines. Thanks to its wine experts, Bulgaria produces some of the world’s best wines.”


Last year 80% to 90% of Bulgaria’s wine cellars registered a decrease in sales, but representatives of the National Vine and Wine Chamber voiced hopes that this situation would not repeat. The wine cellars deliver their produce to restaurants and hotels, but this sector was brought to a standstill due to the anti-epidemic measures.


“Hopefully, there won’t be another lockdown. I would also like to see Bulgarians more mature and willing to receive Covid-19 vaccines, so that we can return to normality as soon as possible. The quickly this happens, the better, because this country’s economy should function and everyone should be able to work. Grapes are 30% more expensive as compared to last year, which will affect the price of wine and other alcoholic beverages. The situation on the electricity and gas markets is very alarming, because their price saw a three-fold increase and every producer must increase prices, in order to avoid bankruptcy.”


Grape prices have increased, despite the high yields.

“This year’s grape harvest is better than ever. Grape yields varied from 600 to 900 kilograms per decare”, Tihomor Trifonov, chief technologist of a winery in the village of General Kantardzhievo told the BNR-Varna. In his words, 1 kilogram of grapes is enough to make 550-600 ml of wine. The winery in General Kantardzhievo produces around 200,000 bottles of wine annually. It makes 12 types of wines and its produce sells predominantly on the domestic market. The winery exports small quantities abroad, mainly to foreign guests who visited this place before. In Tihomir Trifonov’s words, it takes a lot of effort to make tasty and high-quality wine. Bulgaria’s wine producers are highly assessed by world wine experts. That is why it is not surprising that the International Organization of Vine and Wine (OIV) will open its first office in Bulgaria, most likely in Plovdiv.

English version: Kostadin Atanasov

Photos: BGNES, BNR and library


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

The five largest Indian IT companies already have offices in Bulgaria

Bulgaria and India will intensify their cooperation in various sectors of mutual interest. This was discussed at a meeting of the Bulgarian Minister of Economy Petko Nikolov with Ambassador of India to Bulgaria H.E. Sanjay Rana. The two focused..

published on 10/31/24 5:48 PM

A Bulgarian-Czech Chamber of Commerce established in Sofia

On October 31, 2024, 10 business leaders in Bulgaria founded the first Bulgarian-Czech Chamber of Commerce in the country. At the Embassy of the Czech Republic in Sofia, in the presence of Martin Dvořák, Minister of European Affairs of the Czech..

published on 10/31/24 1:54 PM

The model of EU subsidies distorts agricultural production in Bulgaria, the director of the Institute of Agrarian Economics says

In the space of 15 years, from 2005 until 2020, 75% of the farms in the country have disappeared – from 500,000 in 2005 down to 132,000 in 2020, said Prof. Dr. Bozhidar Ivanov, Director of the Institute of Agrarian Economics at an international..

published on 10/31/24 9:39 AM