ON
← Back to feed
🏛️ Politics
BG🏛️ PoliticsCenteryesterday

Cooperation between Botash and Bulgargaz will be expanded and the terms of the current contract will be revised, the Turkish Energy Minister announced.

Turkish Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar announced during a meeting with Bulgarian Energy Minister Iva Petrova and a Bulgarian delegation at a NATO summit that cooperation between Turkish energy firm 'Botash' and Bulgarian company 'Bulgargaz' will be expanded, and the current agreement between them will be reviewed. The announcement was made via Bayraktar's official profile, where he stated that discussions focused on advancing energy cooperation, particularly gas trade. A protocol was signed by the two countries' national companies to develop collaboration related to natural gas. However, the announcement did not mention details about the 15-month freeze of the agreement, which had been previously reported by Bulgaria’s Council of Ministers press office. Bayraktar expressed hope that the protocol would contribute to regional energy stability.

How each side covered it

The same event, grouped by the political lean of the outlets covering it.

How each side covered it

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Covered around the world

The same event as reported in other countries.

Covered around the world

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Claims check

Key factual claims, and how many sources assert vs dispute each.

Claims check

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

0 reports

Keep the news honest.

ObjectiveNews is reader-funded and ad-free — we show you the bias instead of hiding it. Support independent journalism for €5/month.

Become a Supporter

Related stories