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

Extension of Turk Stream gas pipeline project to run through Bulgaria - what this country stands to gain?

In the presence of premier Borissov, Bulgartransgaz and Arkad consortium signed a contract for construction and commissioning of the extension of the gas transferring infrastructure from the Bulgaria –Turkey to the Bulgaria-Serbia border.​
Photo: bulgartransgaz.bg

Bulgartransgaz and the Saudi company Arkad signed at the Council of Ministers building a contract for construction of the extension of the Turkish Stream gas pipeline from the Bulgaria-Turkey border to the Bulgaria-Serbia border, which will put an end to all rumors, speculations and doubts whether this important and strategic for Bulgaria, as well as for Central and Eastern Europe pipeline project will run through Bulgaria’s territory on its way to Serbia, Slovakia, Hungary and Austria.

Bulgaria’s Premier Boyko Borissov prefers to call this project Balkan Stream and the Russian side is not against this name. According to this contract, the Russian gas coming from Turkey via the Turk Stream pipeline will enter Bulgarian territory at the Bulgaria-Turkey border. Bulgaria’s leg of the Turkish Stream gas pipeline between the Bulgaria-Turkey and the Bulgaria-Serbia borders will be 474 kilometers long. Now, the construction of Bulgaria’s stretch of Turk Stream can start and the first gas quantities may start flowing along the pipeline as early as 2021. The construction of the Bulgarian section of Turk Stream will cost EUR 1.1 billion and the construction deadline is 615 days.

What Bulgaria and the Central European countries stand to gain and lose? 

At first glance, Bulgaria does not gain much from this project. The annual gas transit fee will amount to nearly EUR 100 million. In other words, the construction costs will pay off in about 10 years or so. On the other hand, Bulgaria will remain a key factor in Europe’s energy sector and will continue transiting gas to many European countries. Moreover, the new gas pipeline proves that the intentions and the ideas of the Bulgarian authorities to turn Bulgaria into a gas distribution hub in the region and Eastern Europe are right and expedient. In particular, the Bulgarian authorities are planning to launch the Balkan Hub gas distribution project. Balkan Hub will receive gas from various sources and gas suppliers and sell gas quantities to different clients.

So far, Bulgaria had Russian gas only, although its attempt to buy liquefied gas from the USA turned successful. This country also signed a contract for the delivery of 1 billion cubic meters of gas from Azerbaijan as of 2020. The Bulgaria-Greece gas interconnector, which is also financed with EU money, will be built soon. It will allow Bulgaria to buy gas from the USA, as well as from the Middle East and the Mediterranean countries. These options will bring financial benefits both for the country and for its citizens who will be able to buy gas at a more competitive price, because part of the gas quantities transited through Bulgaria’s extension of Turk Stream will be for local consumption, which will encourage the Bulgarian households to gasify their homes. Besides, diversification of energy supplies means energy security. The new gas pipeline will also boost Bulgaria’s economy and the economy of the Central European countries which will be supplied with gas from the new gas pipeline as well.

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

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

Business climate in Bulgaria worsens in October

In October 2024, the total business climate indicator decreased by 5.6 percentage points compared to September, dropping from 22.5% to 16.9%. The index declined in all monitored sectors, the National Statistical Institute announced. In industry, the..

published on 10/30/24 1:36 PM