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Sofia's mayor on work visit to Brussels
19:57 Thu 31 Jan 2008 - Spasena Baramova
 

Sofia's mayor Boiko Borissov was on a 2-day visit to Brussels to take part in a meeting on the framework of the sustainable energy week 2008, the press office of the Sofia municipality announced on January 31.

The sustainable energy week is organised by the European Commission and focusses on reducing greenhouse gasses by 20 per cent.

In Brussels Borissov met Geoffrey Van Orden, British member of the European Parliament (MEP), who had been rapporteur for Bulgaria in the European Parliament during Bulgaria's accession to the EU, and Ari Vatanen, Finnish MEP. Ari Vatanen was the MEP who proposed an amendment which included more flexible time frames for closing units 3 and 4 of the Kozloduy nuclear power plant (NPP) during the discussion of the report on Bulgaria's progress towards EU membership.

During the talks Borissov once again defended that the reactors were safe and that a new examination of their technical condition was needed. He argued for a revision of the EU decision to close the two units.

Later Borissov met with Georges-Stavros Kremlis, head of the Cohesion Policy and Environmental Impact Assessments unit at the Environment Directorate-General of the European Commission (EC). Borissov and Kremlis discussed consumer refuse management, refuse dumps rehabilitation, the construction of sewerage and collectors under the ISPA programme (Instrument for Structural Policies for Pre-Accession) and environmental problems caused by Kremikovtzi.

Borissov informed Kremlis of Sofia's progress on preparing pre-project researches on the construction of a refuse processing installation, as well as of the opening of the Souhodol landfil. Borissov requested that the penal procedure against Bulgaria be stopped, saying that all European requirements regarding environment protection and refuse management were met.

Borissov said the implementation of the refuse management programme was on schedule and regular reports on the construction of the installation would be sent.

„We were assured that Sofia would receive 131 million euro for the construction of the installations and we received a confirmation that part of the money would be set apart so that we can very quickly start the process of separating the refuse and cut down its volume by 30 to 40 per cent,“ Borissov said after the meeting. „As far as Kremikovtzi is concerned, our wish is that all ecological standards be kept. The interests of Sofia citizens and of Kremikovtzi workers should come first,“ he said.

Later on January 31 Borissov was expected to talk to EC's Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs, the press centre of Sofia Municipality announced.

On February 1 Borissov will report to the forum on the strategy of Sofia's municipality on a sustainable city energy concept.

 
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Comments
 
Comments by Mickey Grant - 06:50 01 Feb 2008
Possibly this will be my last post dealing with the Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian doctor. Why post it on this story? I suppose because this story is now old news and also because this story has to do with energy. Not the aspect of sustainable energy, but rather the aspects of non-sustainable energy as in Libya’s jail swap deal for BP to gain access to energy. Why bother with edicts about sustainable energy when you can get massive amounts of oil for the man proven guilty of blowing up a Pan Am jet? Wasn’t this one of the conditions for the release of the Benghazi 6? Possibly it was delayed so it didn’t look as much as if it was part of the conditions. The release of the man held in prison in Scotland who had been convicted for the murder of 270 passengers on the Pan Am flight, which he blew up over Lockerbie. Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi (Arabic: عبد الباسط محمد علي المقرحي) (not المقراحي as commonly misspelled by the media) (born April 1, 1952) is a former Libyan intelligence officer, head of security for Libyan Arab Airlines, and director of the Center for Strategic Studies in Tripoli.[1] On January 31, 2001, he was convicted, by a panel of Scottish Judges sitting in a special court at Camp Zeist in the Netherlands, of 270 counts of murder for his part in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, on December 21, 1988.[2] Megrahi was sentenced to life imprisonment and is serving his sentence in Greenock prison, near Glasgow. BP denied there were political reasons for the ratification of the deal being delayed. But the company has been involved in political negotiations with Tripoli before, dispatching one of its in-house advisers who was a former UK intelligence officer to negotiate the release last year of the BULGARIAN NURSES IN LIBYA. It is wonderful that the nurses and Palestinean doctor were released. They never should have spent one day in Libya. What is sad, is that the person responsible for the HIV outbreak in Libya is not only free but continues to be the dictator of Libya. Amnesty International indicates that Libya is likely the worse violater of human rights in the world… it would be better stated that kaddafi is the worse violater of human rights with the exception possibly of Pol Pot in Cambodia. It is a sad state that in a so called civilized world that money buys everything. It’s what got OJ Simpson free as well as so many other high profile rich criminals. What constitutes the nature of a criminal? Usually it’s defined as someone who violates laws. The highest law has to do with murder. Now we know that 900 million dollars will free a mass murderer… that comes to be about 3.3 million dollars for every victim. Instead of that money going to the families of the victims, it goes to Libya for the exploration rights BP will exercise. BP’s profits likely will be in the billions. What I learned from making my film INJECTION is that nothing matters in the world except power and money. It is all very depreassing. The only thing that wasn’t depreassing for my entire experience creating the documentary about the case was the day I finally got to meet the Palestinean doctor and one of the nurses. It was a miracle that amidst all these absurd machinations of the idiot dictator in Libya and the ego of the world politicians that something good did come out of it all. Their freedom. Most of all what is sad, is that the HIV outbreak in Libya is still being hidden by kaddafi. If the Libyan population only knew how badly managed their country was… wait a minute… I think they know how bad their country is, the problem is that if they try to do anything, then they are executed. What a great partner for the EU and the US to go forward with in their wonderful wars on terror. Mickey Grant
 
 
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