Putin Declares Easter Ceasefire in Ukraine War
The Kremlin has announced that Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered an “Easter ceasefire” in the war in Ukraine, declaring a temporary halt in hostilities lasting around 36 hours
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View of the natural gas pipeline in the suburbs of Belarusian capital Minsk. Photo by EPA/BGNES.
Belarusian president Aleksandr Lukashenko stated Friday that should Gazprom fail to make additional payments to Belarus within the next 24 hours, Belarus is going to stop all transit of Russian carbon fuel through it territory, reports Russian agency Interfax.
Official Gazprom representative Sergey Kupriyanov responded to the ultimatum by stating that under the contract in force Gazprom owes nothing to the Belarussian side.
He added that the two parties had agreed "in principle" on appendices to the 2010 contract that would satisfy the claims of both.
Belarus had announced an earlier ultimatum Thursday, requiring a higher transit fee to be paid by Moscow.
Later Thursday Gazrpom's Kuprianov announced that Gazprom sent to Belarus documents that can formalize the higher transit rates requested by the Belarussian side, but requesting an adequate raise in Belarusian internal wholesale gas prices, of which Gazprom owns a percentage.
As an additional feature of the gas farce, Interfax reports that activists from the Belarusian Youth Republican Union are collecting "humanitarian aid for Gazprom" in downtown Minsk, so that the Russian company can pay its transit fees.
Bulgaria’s fuel market has recorded a sharp upward shift since the outbreak of the war in Iran, with diesel and petrol prices rising significantly across the country
The second exploration drilling in the Krum-1 area of the Khan Asparuh block in Bulgaria’s Black Sea has also failed to identify commercially significant natural gas deposits, according to OMV Petrom
The Ombudswoman institution has voiced strong opposition to the proposed increase in heating prices in Sofia, which is expected to approach nearly 30 percent
The Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (EWRC) in Bulgaria has set the price of natural gas for April 2026 at 34.27 euros per megawatt-hour, excluding access, transmission, excise duties and VAT
Fuel prices in Bulgaria have recorded a sharp upward movement over the past month, with diesel showing the most significant increase, according to data from the Fuelo platform
Bulgargaz has defended its previously submitted proposal for a 5% rise in natural gas prices for April before the Energy and Water Regulatory Commission, with CEO Veselin Sinabov stressing that there is currently no justification for any further increases
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