Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Varna Municipality acquires 29% of the shares of International Fair Plovdiv

Photo: library

Varna Municipality approved the gratuitous acquisition of 29% of the assets of International Fair Plovdiv which were previously owned by the state. A resolution of the Bulgarian government transferred the ownership to the Black Sea city of Varna. 20% of the state-owned assets were transferred to Plovdiv Municipality, but the municipal councilors of that city refused to acquire those assets, saying that they would agree to acquire 49% of the shares of the emblematic fair. Bulgarian businessman Georgi Gergov is the majority shareholder of the company. The International Fair Plovdiv was founded in 1892 when in August the same year the first Bulgarian agricultural and industrial exhibition was held in Plovdiv. It aimed at stimulating the weak Bulgarian industry and agriculture and at establishing contacts between local and foreign producers. Today the International Fair Plovdiv is among the biggest of its kind in Eastern Europe. It covers an area of 352,000 square meters and consists of 17 multifunctional pavilions.  




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 Bulgarian National Bank (BNB) expects inflation in the country to continue to rise until the end of 2025

The lack of sufficient manpower and strong private consumption are the main reasons for inflation, according to the second "Economic Review" of the Bulgarian National Bank (BNB) for the year. Annual inflation is 2.9%, increasing by 2.1% by May 2025..

published on 8/7/25 8:53 AM

The economy of expectations – how the fear of price increases actually leads to price increases

After months of low inflation and even temporary deflation in April this year, according to official national statistics, the trend abruptly reversed. On July 15, literally days after Bulgaria received a green light from Brussels for..

published on 8/6/25 9:51 AM
Rumen Draganov

Adopting the euro will not make tourism more expensive, it will even reduce some prices

Bulgaria's entry into the eurozone on January 1, 2026 will not make vacations more expensive. This is what Rumen Draganov, director of the Institute for Analysis and Forecasts in Tourism told the Bulgarian National Radio. The prices..

published on 8/4/25 11:14 AM