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

World Water Day - March 22

Drinking water in Bulgaria – do we take it for granted or is it a source of ‎concern

Photo: pixabay

Bulgaria's water resources are not among the largest in Europe, yet almost all ‎water sources in Bulgaria are formed on Bulgarian territory, which makes the country ‎independent in this regard. At the same time, there are towns and villages in ‎Bulgaria where tap water cannot be used even for domestic needs. Even in the ‎capital city of Sofia, technical problems with the water pipes are a frequent ‎phenomenon, and drinking water often gets poured out into the streets... at the ‎expense of the consumers. ‎


Against the background of the ever-increasing needs for access to clean ‎drinking water, what are the challenges facing the water sector in ‎Bulgaria? ‎

The water supply and sewerage sector in Bulgaria has not been in good ‎condition for years, says Ivan Ivanov, chairman of the Bulgarian Water ‎Association, in an interview for Radio Bulgaria. The infrastructure is morally ‎and physically outdated, and the institutions are not sufficiently engaged and do ‎not prioritize water supply and ecology, which are closely linked, stresses Eng. ‎Ivanov. This leads to a constant lack of funds and non-fulfillment of European ‎directives.‎

‎"We have to build a lot of wastewater treatment facilities, ‎but an additional ‎challenge has arisen with the entry into force of the EU Drinking Water Treatment ‎Directive. It has been changed and sets higher goals for all member states of the ‎European Union, as their implementation is related to additional investments. ‎Against the background of the lack of funds for investments, we are currently ‎adding new needs that will be very difficult to meet if Bulgaria does not ‎recognize the water supply and sanitation sector as a priority."‎

In addition to requiring a greater percentage of drinking water purification, the ‎directive introduces new additional indicators for which Bulgaria is ‎technologically not prepared with laboratories to examine the quality of drinking ‎water. On the other hand, water losses in the water supply systems in the country ‎are 60% on average, and some water supply operators report over 80% of ‎losses, which is quite alarming, points out Ivan Ivanov and adds:‎

Eng. Ivan Ivanov, chairman of the Bulgarian Water Association
‎“Of course, these are not just leaks. It is largely due to the so-called commercial ‎losses and incorrect measurement of water consumption. Nevertheless, we need ‎to tackle this problem, especially since this drinking water directive requires all ‎EU member countries to analyze and present data on water losses from water ‎supply systems for the next three years and then they will be given specific clear ‎goals for their reduction”.‎

Even if Bulgaria is calmer for now in terms of available water and water use ‎regimes, at the end of winter in Europe, some countries began to introduce a ‎water rationing regimes. Eventually, this problem will come to us, and it has ‎already come locally to Bulgaria’s Pernik once. “Unfortunately, I remain ‎convinced that and we will have more serious problems with water resources in ‎the future", predicts Ivan Ivanov.‎
The lack of a water strategy has led most water sector professionals to believe ‎that the state has abdicated from its responsibility. And even if there are qualified ‎professionals with the energy and desire to find a solution to the problems, they ‎stumble in the clumsy apparatus of public administration. This is precisely what ‎makes young specialists in Bulgaria look for career opportunities in other ‎countries , Ivan Ivanov believes:‎

‎"Very often the problems with water supply and the rationing of drinking ‎water are not due to a water source and water resource problem, but to the lack ‎of an engineering solution implemented in practice. For example, for more than ‎‎20 years, the town of Omurtag has been under water rationing because ‎the state cannot find an engineer to design a good facility to bring water to the ‎town. This is an absurd situation that should not be allowed. Water supply is a ‎priority for every city, it must be thought of first, and I cannot understand how ‎many more years we will exist in this ludicrous situation."‎


The main challenge for the rehabilitation of the national water supply and ‎sewerage system remains the insufficient financing. The state relies mainly on the funds from ‎the European Union and to some extent on the funds of the water supply ‎operators. The Bulgarian state also allocates certain amounts, but they are not ‎enough, explains Eng. Ivanov:‎

‎"The bad thing is that against the background of this shortage, we do not manage to absorb fully even the funds that ‎are provided to us by the European Union free of charge. Under the Environment Operational Program, we report a delay, ‎which also resulted in missed absorption of available resources to the tune of ‎hundreds of millions of Bulgarian leva. The reasons for the non-implementation of ‎the projects are rooted in the fact that the individual institutions had to make a quick ‎decision to update the prices of the builders to support the water supply operators. ‎These decisions are made, but when it is too late to catch up with what has been ‎omitted. It is precisely the lack of priorities regarding the water supply and ‎sewerage sector that leads to missed benefits for all of us. At the moment, a ‎specialized law for water supply and sewerage services is being developed under ‎the Recovery and Resilience Plan, which will perhaps lead to the solution of some ‎of the described problems.”‎

Read also:



Edited by Elena Karkalanova

English version Rositsa Petkova


Photos: bwa-bg.com, Darina Grigorova, BGNES



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

How much of the Bulgarian cultural heritage in Ukraine has been preserved remains unclear

The usurpation of cultural heritage is one of the many inevitable consequences of any military conflict, both historically and today. Until the end of the war in Ukraine, it is impossible to adequately analyse the extent of the damage caused to the..

published on 11/15/24 12:00 PM

Balkan developments

Athens plans to modernise the Greek army by 2030 Greece's Defence Minister Nikos Dendias presented the plan for changes in the army to the parties in parliament. The reforms will cover all three branches of the military. By 2030, 33 units..

published on 11/15/24 10:15 AM
The forum at the National Museum of Archeology

The Untold Stories of Bulgarians programme gathers the legacy of our compatriots as ancestral memory

A short video kaleidoscope of the "untold stories" of worthy Bulgarians - scientists, entrepreneurs, engineers, artists - who have contributed to our country's good image in the eyes of the world opened an unconventional public forum that showcased the..

published on 11/14/24 12:48 PM