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

Gas fog thickens

Since the end-2014 official announcement made by Russian President Vladimir Putin about the termination of the South Stream gas project intended to deliver Russian gas to the territory of the European Union via the Bulgarian Black Sea coast, there have been various rumors in Sofia, Moscow and other capitals surrounding the project. This is hardly surprising given the gigantic scale of the facility and its economic potential for many countries. There have been vocal speculations over whether the South Stream will take place or not in connection with developments regarding the questioned North Stream II and the almost failed Turkish Stream. And in the course of all those hints and riddles, quite a new concept has emerged, the so-called Bulgarian Stream. This is a brand new pipeline intended to start from the brainchild of the Bulgarian government – a gas hub on the Black Sea, and reach Central and Western Europe.

So far there has been zero official clarity and so media have been speculating while officials remain silent and even deny the existence of such a project.

However, there is a lot of logic in this facility. The whole of South and Central Europe remains without Russian gas supplies, and Gazprom loses huge potential markets. The logic though is economic while arguments are quite different at the level of politics. Neither Washington, nor Brussels accept further Russification of the energy sector of this group of countries, especially in the light of tense relations with Vladimir Putin. Besides, the failure of both South Stream and Turkish Stream terminated for political reasons in the main, has been telltale how much Europe’s energy is dominated by geopolitics. Won’t the mysterious Bulgarian Stream share the fate of the other two projects? After all, without fixing the political aspects of this mythical gas pipeline, it will no doubt remain in the realm of mythology. The same is likely to happen to the Balkan gas hub cherished by the Bulgarian authorities. It might end up empty of purpose if not supplied with Russian gas.

For the time being, it is clear that nothing is clear. Sporadic and conflicting hints are not enough to draw up a decent notion about the actual plans of all countries involved. So, let us face it that gas fog in both Bulgaria and Europe has progressively thickened.

English Daniela Konstatinova




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

Families are taking out more quick loans to cover consumer expenses

For the first half of 2024, the fast loans reached over 3 billion euros, according to the Bulgarian National Bank (BNB) . In comparison, at the end of June 2023, the granted quick loans totalled 2.5 billion euros. According to the..

published on 8/19/24 8:50 AM

Natural gas prices are expected to decrease by 2% in September

Natural gas prices are expected to decrease by around 2% in September, according to a forecast by Bulgargaz. This is clear from the request submitted to the Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (EWRC). The company informs that next month, the..

published on 8/17/24 2:47 PM

Unemployment in Bulgaria has dropped by 7.6% on an annual basis

The unemployment rate in Bulgaria stood at 5.41% in July, the National Employment Agency says. 152,844 is the number of unemployed persons registered last month, and 14,542 started work. An increase in the number of job vacancies has been..

published on 8/16/24 2:29 PM