Borissov-Linked Company Seeks to Acquire Gazprom Stations in Bulgaria?
According to the opposition political party "Revival", Gazprom is in the process of selling its network of gas stations in Bulgaria
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A file photo of pipelaying vessel Saipem 7000. EPA/BGNES
Saipem, the Italian pipe-laying company that was to take part in the construction of South Stream, has filed an arbitration claim against Gazprom, a Russian business daily reports citing court documents.
The EUR 759 M claim has been lodged with Paris-based International Chamber of Commerce, RBC writes, adding the claim was submitted in November of last year.
South Stream, a gas pipeline project designed to supply Central Europe via Bulgaria and Serbia, was abandoned by Russia in 2014, with President Putin citing opposition from the EU.
Saipem, a subsidiary of state-controlled Italian oil and gas company Eni, has filed the claim against South Stream Transport B.V., the company that was to be responsible for the underwater section of South Stream. Initially, the Netherlands-based company was a joint venture of several shareholders including Gazprom, France's EDF and Germany's Wintershall. Gazprom, however, bought the shares of the other two as the project was declared abandoned.
According to RBC, South Stream Transport sought an out-of-court settlement, but Saipem rejected its request.
The Russian energy giant sought to attract Saipem into the Turkish Stream project, which was announced as an alternative to South Stream but which has been called into question by tensions between Moscow and Ankara.
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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