Majority of Bulgarians Fear Impact of Green Deal on Electricity Bills
Amid the implementation of measures under the European Union's Green Deal, 64% of Bulgarians have identified the escalating electricity prices as their top concern
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Svetla Todorova, Chair of Bulgaria's State Commission for Energy and Water Regulation (DKEVR), photo by BGNES
Svetla Todorova, Chair of Bulgaria’s State Commission for Energy and Water Regulation (DKEVR), has suggested that a 10% power price hike as of October 1 is the socially tolerable limit.
In a Monday interview for the morning broadcast of bTV, she claimed that there were preconditions for a price hike of up to 50% but such a move was socially unacceptable and nobody was likely to come up with such a proposal.
Todorova clarified that a power price hike of up to 50% would mean that the authorities had decided that all of the deficits in the energy system, most notably the debts of the National Electricity Company (NEK), could be covered through higher electricity prices.
The DKEVR Chair added that such a scenario would mean that the state had abdicated its responsibility in the sphere.
Speaking ahead of a final decision on power tariffs scheduled for Tuesday, she emphasized that electricity prices would most probably increase by 10% as of October 1, in line with the decision of DKEVR.
The president of the Confederation of Bulgarian Trade Unions, Plamen Dimitrov, has warned that inflation in Bulgaria is likely to exceed earlier projections, even if fuel prices begin to decline
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
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