site.btaItalian Waste Found at Bulgarian Port Is Not Hazardous or Toxic - Prosecutors
January 20 (BTA) - Italian waste which was found to sit
 unlawfully at the Bulgarian Black Sea port of Bourgas, is not 
hazardous or toxic, the prosecution service said at a special 
news briefing Monday. The prosecution opened a probe after 20 
containers with waste from Italy was found at Bourgas Port and 
it turned out it had been sitting there since the beginning of 
September 2019.
News of waste found at various sites across the country has been
 coming virtually every day. Because of the lack of information 
in some cases and the odd circumstances about the way waste is 
stored, paired with endemic air pollution, have rise of 
wide-spread suspicions that waste, possibly hazardous, is being 
incinerated in Bulgaria in violation of the rules. This has 
prompted checks by the compent authorities, including the 
prosecution service. 
The leader of the Bourgas District Prosecution Office, Georgi 
Chinev, said that the sender of the waste in the Bourgas case, 
the Italian company Dentice Pantaleone, and the receiver, 
Blatsion OOD, are the same who sent and received waste at Varna 
Port. 
Chinev said, however, that what was found in the countainers did
 not match the documents of the waste shipment. The containers 
contained textiles, paper and metal while the documents were for
 plastics and rubber. 
The waste was meant to be taken to a plant in Pleven, said 
Chinev. 
The containers with the waste were supposed to be at the port 
for 90 days from September 5. 
The prosecution service is to do more tests on the waste to 
stablish the exact content. They said "they are ready to seek 
assistance from international police services to investigate the
 waste shipment".   
The manager of waste buyer Blatsion, Macedonian national Goran 
Angelov, told the Macedonian news agency MIA that the containers
 with waste were bound for the Bobov Dol coal-fuelled power 
plant for incineration but never went there because in the 
meantime the power plant's licence for waste incineration 
expired. Angelov also said that Bulgaria does not have a ban on 
the import of scrap wood, textiles and glass. 
Last Saturday,  Environment Minister Emil Dimitrov officially 
said that a Ministry check found that the Bobov Dol power plant 
has not been burning hazardous waste.
Greenpeace' Meglena Antonova is widely quoted by media outlets 
as saysing that the Bobov Dol power plant is not designed to 
burn waste. LN/NV 
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