A survey by German automobile club Automobilclub von Deutschland, one of the biggest in the country, shows that current fuel prices in Bulgaria are among the highest in Europe in comparison with the standard of living. Bulgaria is in third position in these negative rankings, after the Netherlands and Norway, where prices stand at EUR 2.34 and EUR 2.30 per liter of petrol and diesel respectively. For the time being, fuel is cheapest in Hungary, at EUR 1.28 per liter. Businesses in Bulgaria promised the government they would keep fuel prices at some of the lowest levels in Europe (А95-BGN 2.95, diesel - 3.11 BGN), but whether they are affordable for the public is quite another matter. The survey by the German experts shows how long people in given European countries have to work to buy one liter of the most widely used petrol. For the average German that time is around 12 minutes, i.e. a little below the average for the 30 countries included in the survey which is 18 minutes. But in countries like Bulgaria, Romania and Latvia, that time ranges between 32 and 43 minutes, putting them firmly at the bottom of the rankings.
That is why  alongside the war in Ukraine, prices are the other topic at the focus of public  attention in this country. Though not the only cause, the war raging just 1,000  kilometres from Bulgaria and the insecurity it breeds are having a serious  effect on the fluctuation of the prices of a number of commodities, among them  fuels. The rise in prices is hitting carriers, as well as owners of small and  medium-sized petrol stations which are not part of big petrol station chains  really hard. 

“We, bus service operators, have contracts under the Public Procurement Act, and we have to strictly abide by their clauses,” Vasil Pironkov, chairman of the board of the Bus Carriers Chamber said in an interview with BNR-Plovdiv. “We were right to demand that part of the excise duty be reduced – that 50% of it be given as compensation. At the same time the biodiesel supplement should be scrapped which would allow the price to go down by about 10 stotinki per liter,” Pironkov said, and added that they have proposals regarding methane carriers who will suffer losses as methane has no excise duty and its price has doubled.
The biggest problem small and medium-sized fuel  traders face is connected with the small differenecs there are between  wholesale and retail prices. This  means they have to work at a minimum profit, or almost at a loss. 

“Some traders are unable to cope with these prices. If this tendency holds, some will go bankrupt. Because their turnover is higher, the big chains will hold out, but the truth is that we have not seen such small margins between wholesale and retail prices for a very long time,” Andrey Delchev, Executive Director of the Bulgarian Petroleum and Gas Association explained in an interview with Nova TV. “If prices on international markets start going down, prices in Bulgaria will follow because some trader is bound to import cheaper fuel and start selling it.”

Andrey Delchev says that the worst-case scenario is for fuel prices to continue to go up, especially if there is a ban on the import of crude oil from Russia – because crude oil is what the refinery in this country works with, or if the chain of crude oil supply from neighbouring countries is disrupted. “However, there are no such indications for now,” he adds.
Compiled by Yoan  Kolev
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