[09SOFIA716] BULGARIA: WHAT IF THE GAS IS CUT AGAIN?

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Published by Wikileaks & Bivol.bg
 id: 241152 date: 12/22/2009 11:47 refid: 09SOFIA716 origin: Embassy Sofia classification: CONFIDENTIAL destination:  header: VZCZCXRO2688 OO RUEHDBU RUEHFL RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHNP RUEHROV RUEHSL RUEHSR DE RUEHSF #0716/01 3561147 ZNY CCCCC ZZH O 221147Z DEC 09 FM AMEMBASSY SOFIA TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 6553 INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE PRIORITY RUEAIIA/CIA WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY RHEBAAA/DEPT OF ENERGY WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC PRIORITY   C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 SOFIA 000716    SIPDIS    DEPARTMENT FOR SPE MORNINGSTAR, DOE FOR ELKIND,CUTLER,  EKIMOFF    E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/20/2019  TAGS: ENRG, PREL, PGOV, ECON, BU  SUBJECT: BULGARIA:  WHAT IF THE GAS IS CUT AGAIN?    Classified By: CDA Susan Sutton for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).     1. (C) If a Russia-Ukraine dispute results in a 2010 gas  cut-off similar to one experienced in January 2009, Bulgaria  will be better prepared.  Gas storage supplies are full,  agreements with Greece and Turkey to reverse gas flows have  been established, and district heating plants are prepared to  make a quick switch to mazut, if necessary.  While all of  these arrangements are in place, they are complicated and  untested.  We believe, under the best case scenario, Bulgaria  will be able to meet 80 percent of the country's demand for  two weeks, after which the government will likely be able to  cover half of the country's demand for an extended period.  End Summary.    Background  ----------    2. (SBU) Bulgaria is dependent on Russia for approximately 92  percent of its gas consumption totaling import of about 3.65  billion cubic meters (bcm) annually (or 10-12 mcm/day).  In  2008, domestic production accounted for less than eight per  cent of Bulgaria's gas consumption with a total extraction of  217.5 million cubic meters (mcm).  The majority of this gas  was from the now depleted Galatta Field in the Black Sea  shale area.  In 2009 Galatta extraction was discontinued.  Approximately 90 percent of imported gas is consumed by  industrial users, including heating utilities.  Out of the  estimated total consumption of 3.35 bcm per year, 2.21 bcm  (66 percent) is used by industry, 1.01 bcm (30 percent) for  electricity and heating, 0.08 bcm (2.5 percent) by the  service sector, and 0.05 bcm (1.5 percent) by households.  About 47.5 percent of Bulgaria's heating needs come through  the district heating plants running on gas.  As January 2009  showed, a gas cut-off would greatly impact Bulgaria's heat  production capabilities, with approximately three million  residents needing alternative sources of heat for household  needs.  The chemical and metallurgical industries would also  be hit hard from a gas cut-off.    What if the Gas is Cut Again?  -----------------------------    3. (C) The January 2009 gas cut off spurred the GOB to pursue  alternative sources of gas supplies and draw up emergency  operational measures for future crises.  Over the past year  Bulgaria actively pursued gas pipeline interconnectors with  Greece and Romania, and will receive EU funds to implement  these medium-term projects.  The Bulgarian government has  also courted Caspian and Central Asian gas producers to fill  interconnectors (including a possible additional  interconnector with Turkey) and to source possible CNG  shuttles over the Black Sea.  It is also expanding domestic  storage capacity.  All of these projects are many years from  realization.    4.  (C)  To meet the immediate requirements of a January 2010  gas cut-off, the government has filled the Chiren storage  facility to its maximum capacity of 1.4 billion cubic meters,  (700 million cubic meters of operational gas and the  remaining as a buffer volume.)  The maximum withdrawal rates  are 4.2 mcm per day for the first twenty days, 4.0 mcm per  day for the next fifteen days, and subsequently decreasing  volumes for the next seven months.  However, the aging  delivery and withdrawal systems have not been subjected to  extended periods of operation at high volumes with reducing  pressures.  Therefore, a sustained supply at a constant  volume of four mcm is questionable.  If gas supplies from  Chiren are needed, priority will be given to industrial users  such as glass plants, greenhouses, poultry farms, and heating  utilities.    5. (C)  Bulgaria will also be able to reverse the gas flow  from Greece, something the Bulgarian and Greek sides worked  out in the last days of the January 2009 gas crisis.  The  technical process will take about five to six hours to switch  the flow, but due to the time required to pump the residual  gas in the pipeline, it will probably take two to three days  to realize adequate supply volume.  Bulgaria has an agreement  with the Greek company DEPA for supply of 2.5 to 3 million  cubic meters per day.  The source of this gas is LNG from the  Revitoussa LNG Terminal in Northern Greece and can be  supplied for an extended period of time.  The reversal of the  gas flow from Turkey is more complicated, requiring    SOFIA 00000716  002 OF 002      replacement of a check valve to facilitate reversing the  flow, and could take five to seven days for the gas supplies  to begin.  Through an agreement with BOTAS, Bulgaria can  receive 2.5  to 3 million cubic meters of gas per day,  supplied from Marmora LNG Terminal.  These volumes are  questionable due to the lack of a metering station and  reliance on less accurate, traditional volumetric  measurements.  Bulgaria is not guaranteed the total available  reverse capacity and our best estimate is that it could  receive no more than two mcm per day combined from Greece and  Turkey.    Switching to Mazut and Electricity  ----------------------------------    6. (C) In the event of a new gas crisis, Bulgarian central  heating plants will switch over to mazut.  Due to a lack of  logistical and operational readiness in January 2009, the  heating plants and industrial facilities took three to five  days or longer to make the switch.  Now the Ministry of  Economy and Energy states that all state-owned industrial and  heating utilities are prepared for a quick switch (taking  about a day), if needed.  Some of the large utilities have  stocked mazut volumes three times the size required by the  state (one week's supply.)  Heating plants and industrial  facilities such as the Sofia Central Heating facility can  operate at full capacity using mazut, although there are some  facilities that will need to reduce capacity.  One such  facility is the Plovdiv heating plant, which supplies heat to  over 400,000 residents.  Also, the heating plants can not  operate for an extended period of time on mazut due to EU  emission restrictions.    7. (C) Electricity can also be used as source for household  heating and some limited industrial applications in case of  another gas cut off.  However, this will place additional  burden on an already deteriorating and aging distribution  network that is in need of major upgrades.  The networks in  Sofia, other large cities, and the national grid have not  been upgraded for decades and will not be capable of carrying  substantially increased loads.  In addition, the majority of  old buildings in big cities can only handle constant, low  voltage supply.  Numerous daily operational outages were  reported in January 2009 due to overloads of the system.    8.  (C) Comment:  Bulgaria has taken operational measures  that will enable the country to deal better with any gas  crisis compared to the January 2009 cut off.  Bulgaria's  efforts still don't meet EU standards for preparedness, but  the new Borissov government, which is pursing a less cozy  relationship with Moscow than its predecessor, won't be  caught as unprepared as the last government.  Considerable  work remains, especially on upgrading gas storage facilities  and ensuring that regional interconnectors become reality.  End Comment.  SUTTON 
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