Sat, Jul 04 2009

Baled Sofia refuse could be headed for Sevlievo dump

Wed, Aug 27 2008 10:26 CET bydnevnik.bg 116 Views

The town of Sevlievo in northern Bulgaria could accept some of Sofia's refuse, it emerged on August 26. The mayor of Sevlievo, Yordan Stoikov, has received a letter from Environment Minister Djevdet Chakurov asking that the city accept some of the baled garbage produced by the Bulgarian capital and is yet to reject the request.

Sevlievo has until September 1 to respond to the letter and its mayor has said that the new refuse dump, with a total capacity of one million cu m, could be used to store some, but not all, of the 600 000 tons of baled refuse that Sofia has been temporarily stockpiling in two dumps in Kremikovtzi and Gara Iskur areas, which do not meet the full requirements for such facilities.

Stoikov has said that the Sevlievo municipal council has approved a charge of 20 leva a ton, fees exclued, for the disposal of Sofia rubbish.

The baled refuse stockpiled at temporary sites in Kremikovtzi and Gara Iskur have to be moved by September or else Bulgarian authorities face sanctions from the European Union for breaching waste disposal rules. It is not clear what would happen to the refuse that Sevlievo was unable to accept.

The list of municipalities with new waste depots that could take on some of Sofia's refuse includes Montana, Vratsa, Elin Pelin, Sandanski, Petrich, Gotse Delchev, Troyan, Haskovo, Dospat and Lovech. The list of municipalities that have been asked for assistance is kept under wraps to prevent protests from the local population, but mayors of Plovdiv and Karlovo have already rejected Chakurov's request.

Read the full story on Dnevnik.bg

Write comment

Name: Comment:
Send your comment

More in this category

Cosmote Romania buys rival operator for 3G licence

Mobile operator Cosmote Romania agreed the acquisition of smaller local rival Zapp Mobile for 207 million euro on June 30, after months of negotiations.

Nabucco deal to be signed July 13

The intergovernmental agreement for the Nabucco natural gas pipeline will be signed in Ankara on July 13, it emerged on July 3.

Harnessing the wind

Bulgaria has low taxes, low labour costs and a lot of wind – a good combination for any company seeking to develop wind parks.

Creating a future in IT

On June 5 2009, US ambassador Nancy McEldowney launched the first US-Bulgarian partnership dedicated to Information Technology and Innovation.

In neutral gear

Bulgarian car parts manufacturers have been affected by the recession, but are optimistic about their future.