Bulgaria's Pomorie Says No to Oil Pipeline
A total of 99% of the residents of the coastal town of Pomorie have voted against plans for an oil pipeline passing through the municipality.
Some 23 000 residents of the resort town of Pomorie and the nearby villages were eligible to vote in the Saturday's referendum by answering the question, "Do you approve of the construction of the Burgas-Alexandroupolis oil transit pipeline with its installation and facilities being located on the territory of the Pomorie Municipality?
Turnout at the referendum reached 60.12%.
To be acknowledged as valid, at least 51% of eligible voters in the municipality had to take part in the referendum, which makes it the first a series of similar referendums in neighbouring towns not to be declared void over low turnout.
Still it remains unclear how the outcome can influence the plans to build the pipeline as local referendums have no binding legal power in Bulgaria.
Bulgaria, Greece and Russia agreed to build the pipeline between Burgas and Alexandroupolis, taking Caspian oil to the Mediterranean skirting the congested Bosphorus, in 2007 after more than a decade of intermittent talks.
The agreement for the company which will construct the Burgas-Alexandroupolis oil transit pipeline was signed by Bulgaria during Russian President Putin's visit to Bulgaria in 2008. It is expected to be completed by the end of 2011 or beginning of 2012.
Municipalities neighbouring Pomorie and nearby Burgas are also harbouring fears that the pipeline could damage their lucrative tourism business, while environmental NGOs have branded the existing plans to build an oil terminal out at sea a disaster waiting to happen.
The 280-kilometre pipeline, with 166 kilometres passing through Bulgaria, would have an initial annual capacity of 35 million tonnes, which could be later expanded to 50 million tonnes. Its costs are estimated at up to USD 900 M.
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