Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Will the clock on the interest due for Belene NPP stop ticking any time soon?

The abandoned Belene NPP site

Energy Minister Temenuzhka Petkova left for Moscow on Thursday to meet with the management of the Russian Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation, which, as owner of Atomstroyexport filed a claim against the National Electric Company (NEC) in June as a result of which the Court of Arbitration awarded it 620 million euro for the equipment manufactured for the aborted Belene NPP.

In short, what resulted from this visit was that the Bulgarian and the Russian side will be setting up a joint working group to look into possible options for the Belene project after the Court of Arbitration ruling. Herein lie the different shades of interpretation. According to the Ministry of Energy the experts are yet to look for a solution, ASAP, that would be viable for both sides. According to Rosatom’s First Deputy CEO Kirill Komarov however, the company is ready to discuss possible solutions with its Bulgarian partners, in accordance with the interests of the two sides, but only in the context of a debt reimbursement by the Bulgarian side as soon as possible and no later than the end of the year.

However, this stance by the Russian side excludes the option Bulgarians hold so dear to their hearts – a joint agreement on the sale of the equipment to a third party. To top it all, Minister Petkova explained to Kirill Komarov that this country was in daily communication with the European Commission over the approval of state aid to NEC in the form of an interest-free loan. The red tape involved will take at least two months, and in that time, the clock on the interest is ticking at a rate of 167,000 euro every day. That is the thorn in the side of Deputy Prime Minister Tomislav Donchev who stated it was essential to stop the clock on the interest from ticking, which would accumulate another 61 million within the space of a year. In Donchev’s words the country will seek an option that would mean building the Belene NPP by way of a privatization procedure. He says this intention has the approval of the Russian side. Be as it may, Bulgaria will still have to pay up the close to 630 million euro accumulated to date. That is how the Russians see it. Not like the Bulgarian side – offering to pay 400 million by the end of the year with two deferred payments next year. The clock on the interest due is ticking inexorably. Let us hope it can be heard in Brussels.

English version: Milena Daynova 



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

How building permits are issued and illegal construction becomes legal

Yet another disaster, yet another series of analyses and post-hoc actions by the relevant institutions. The devastating flood that hit the resort village of Elenite a week ago, claiming four lives, has led the state to realise that the flooded..

published on 10/14/25 5:49 PM
Rumen Radev

Political repression and plunder result from security services shake-up, Bulgarian president says

“ The result of the changes in the services is the crushing of inconvenient opponents, ever more aggressive political repression, and the ever more brazen plunder of public resources and private business – about which we will be learning less and less,”..

published on 10/13/25 4:19 PM

The Bulgarians and the Gagauz in Moldova are wary of the country’s European prospects

The election for parliament in the Republic of Moldova on 28 September, 2025 ended in a landslide victory for the ruling Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS). The result was seen by many as a validation of the country’s pro-European policy against the..

updated on 10/9/25 1:58 PM