site.btaEuropean Court of Auditors: Bulgaria-Romania Gas Interconnector Cannot Ensure Sufficient Flows to Bulgaria
European Court of Auditors:Bulgaria-Romania Gas Interconnector Cannot Ensure Sufficient Flows to Bulgaria
 
 Brussels, December 15 (BTA Correspondent Nikolay Jeliazkov) - "The  Bulgaria-Romania gas interconnector will allow for 1.3 million cubic  metres/day natural gas supplies to flow from Romania to Bulgaria.  However, under current conditions, low pressure in the Romanian gas  system would prevent cross-border flows to Bulgaria in this volume," the  European Court of Auditors found in a special report presented on  Tuesday. Additional investments are needed in the Romanian gas  transmission network to connect the internal transmission system with  the transmission transit pipeline that crosses Romania.
 
 "Potential flows of gas to and from Hungary would also currently face  such constraints. Additional investments are needed in the Romanian gas  transmission network to connect the internal transmission system with  the transmission transit pipeline that crosses Romania. Romania would  also need to repeal a domestic law forbidding such gas exports," the  report says.
 
 The gas interconnector projects between Romania, Bulgaria and Greece are  constructing new gas pipelines in addition to existing pipelines. This  is because the capacity of the existing gas transit network through  Romania and Bulgaria to Greece has been reserved by a supplier from a  third country under a long-term contract.
 
 Referring to Bulgaria, the report notes the repeated change of the  leadership of the Energy and Water Regulatory Commission (EWRC). "In the  period 2009 to 2015, the EWRC chairperson was replaced by the  government several times, including four times in 2013 alone.  Independent regulators are required to set energy tariffs with reference  to the actual cost base. However, EWRC set regulated electricity prices  which have led to the situation in which the incumbent energy company  is obliged to buy electricity at high prices and sell it at lower prices  as a public provider, accumulating a deficit of approximately 800  million euro between 2010 and the end of 2014," the report says.
 
 The audit covered policy measures and funding from 2007. It takes a  regional approach and examines case studies in six Member States:  Bulgaria, Estonia, Spain, Lithuania, Poland and Sweden.
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