Bulgarian Authorities Place Seals on 660 Tonnes of Fuel amid Filling Station Probes
Bulgarian authorities have temporarily blocked the sale of a total of 660 tonnes of fuel by placing seals at filling stations amid ongoing inspections.
HOT: » Which party would you vote for (if you could) in the upcoming snap vote in Bulgaria on April 19?
Photo by BGNES
10 000 liters of diesel fuel have been withdrawn from the market following inspections by a regional unit of Bulgaria’s State Agency for Metrological and Technical Surveillance at filling stations on the territory of the Silistra municipality.
The inspections were conducted in the period June 22-25, according to a media statement of the Agency.
The Agency is to issue 18 statements of administrative offence worth a total of BGN 94 000, including 3 for non-compliance with quality requirements, 1 for non-compliance with biofuel component requirements, and 14 for document violations.
The inspections were conducted at 45 filling stations, including 35 sites belonging to fuel retailers and 35 small filling stations.
The inspectors checked 21 conformity declarations used to sell 70 million liters of liquid fuels.
The representatives of the Silistra-based unit of the State Agency for Metrological and Technical Surveillance took 29 samples from diesel fuel and 17 samples from motor spirit.
Lab tests showed 3 cases of non-compliance with diesel fuel quality requirements and 1 case of non-compliance with biofuel component requirements.
A total of 8.7% of the samples deviated from the norms.
Document violations were uncovered at 20% of the sites inspected.
Three of the filling stations inspected were ordered to stop selling liquid fuels temporarily, while four others were issued mandatory instructions for preventing a ban on the sale of liquid fuels.
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
Aniventure Comic Con Returns to Bulgaria with Star Guest Christopher Judge!
Global Fuel Shock: Oil Jumps Over 40% Since Iran War Began