Unless Natgas Interconnector with Greece Is Operational by Mid-2022, Bulgaria May Incur Substantial Penalties from Azeri Supplier
January 16 (BTA) - To date, Bulgargaz has not been informed by  the project company building the natural gas interconnector  Greece-Bulgaria (ICGB) of the exact date on which the interconnector  will be completed, Bulgaria's public supplier of natural gas said in a  press release on Sunday. The provisional understandings on supply with  Azerbaijan expire on June 30, 2022, and unless the ICGB pipeline is  commissioned by that date, the Azeri company may trigger a penalty  clause in the agreement and draw down on a substantial guarantee  furnished by Bulgargaz and the Bulgarian Energy Holding (BEH) (in the  amount of tens of millions of dollars monthly).
 
 Considering that ICGB was inoperable by December 31, 2020 when gas  supplies from Azerbaijan to Bulgaria were agreed to start, Bulgargaz,  BEH and the Energy Ministry reached agreement with the Azeri supplier on  a provisional rerouting of its deliveries over the Greek gas  transmission network DESFA until September 30, 2021, the press release  recalled.
 
 After yet another postponement of the ICGB commissioning, Bulgargaz was  yet again compelled to approach the Azeri side for an agreement to  extend the provisional understandings until June 30, 2022. 
 
 The understandings made it possible for Bulgargaz and the Bulgarian  market to receive natural gas from Azerbaijan from the very first day  agreed with the supplier, and Bulgaria became one of the first countries  in Europe to benefit from Azeri gas supplies, the press release says.
 
 Bulgargaz expects the interconnector to be commissioned by July 1, 2022  at the latest without further delay so as to be able to receive the full  amount of gas from Azerbaijan.
 
 Because of the delayed commissioning of the interconnector, in  January-September 2021 Bulgargaz was compelled to import just 250  million cu m of the annual quantity of 1 billion cu m of natural gas  contracted with Azerbaijan. The Azeri gas is currently much cheaper than  the Russian gas, whose price is 70 per cent pegged to the prices on the  European gas exchanges.
 
 The 182-km ICGB pipeline runs from Komotini (Northeastern Greece) via  Kurdjali, Haskovo and Dimitrovgrad to Stara Zagora (Southeastern  Bulgaria). The project is of strategic significance for achieving  diversification of gas sources and routes to Bulgaria and the region as a  whole. LG
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