Bulgarians Join Balkan Protest Against Soaring Food Prices
Bulgaria has joined Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro in organizing protests against rising food prices
Bulgarian Regional Minister Lilyana Pavlova said that the new public tender for the construction of the first section of Hemus motorway between Yablanitsa and Boaza will be launched in May.
Prime Minister Boyko Borisov ordered the suspension of the BGN 800 M tender for the construction of lots 1 and 2 in February due to suspicions for the lack of transparency and irregularities in the selection procedure of contractors.
Media reports linked the contracting firms to controversial MP and media mogul Delyan Peevski and the head of Lukoil Bulgaria Valentin Zlatev.
It then became clear that the construction will be funded by the government budget, with options to make it cheaper to be explored.
Pavlova assured that the public procurement procedure had been carried out by the rules, but the lack of EU funding necessitated the project to be reviewed.
As a result, the projected speed is to be decreased and the track will be designed to follow to a maximum extent the relief of the terrain, which would make the construction cheaper.
The construction is foreseen to be divided into smaller sections, Pavlova added in an interview for private bTV station on Thursday.
The projected speed for the section has been reduced to 120 km/h and the median strip shortened from three to two metres.
For the next section to Dermantsi interchange, the two tunnels, which had initially been foreseen, will not be constructed, which would save at least BGN 100 M.
The new project also foresees to bypass a tunnel and viaduct in the section between Dermantsi and Kalenik interchange.
A projected speed of 140 km/h requires more straight sections and higher viaducts, which would make the motorway more expensive.
The height of the viaducts will also be reduced in the section between Pleven and Lovech.
In 2024, labor inspectors in Bulgaria carried out a total of 6,682 inspections in the construction sector, representing 13% of the overall 49,858 inspections conducted across all industries
According to a study presented to MPs by Prof. Emilia Chengelova, from the Institute of Philosophy and Sociology at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, the shadow (grey/informal) economy in Bulgaria remains high at 33%
A recent survey by digital payments company Visa reveals that most Bulgarians planning a winter vacation prefer to pay digitally at ski resorts
the last quarter of 2024, the proportion of properties purchased with mortgage loans in Bulgaria grew to 27%, or roughly every third property
Bulgaria's labor market remained stagnant throughout 2024
Retail sales across the European Union showed a decline in December, with both the eurozone and the EU reporting decreases
Bulgaria's Perperikon: A European Counterpart to Peru's Machu Picchu
Bulgarians Among EU's Least Frequent Vacationers, Struggling with Affordability