Mobility

Bulgaria preparing law on promoting e-mobility, targets 30,000 EVs by 2026

Bulgaria prepares law on on promoting e-mobility, targets 30,000 EVs by 2026 Borislav Sandov

Published

April 14, 2022

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

April 14, 2022

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Bulgaria’s goal is to have at least 30,000 electric vehicles in Bulgaria by 2026, and to install 10,000 charging stations, said Deputy Prime Minister for Climate Policy and Minister of Environment and Water Borislav Sandov. According to the latest data, there were only 3,000 vehicles at the end of 2021.

Borislav Sandov announced that Bulgaria would draft a law on promoting electric mobility soon. By the end of June, the Government intends to create a specialized commission for the development and encouragement of e-mobility.

The new commission will prepare a model of simplified regulation to encourage the construction of charging stations, while a long-term vision for the new law is going to be ready in the autumn, minister Sandov said at the opening of a round table entitled “Transport of the future – clean energy at a fair price.”

Bulgaria  will install 20-30 fast charging hubs on major roads

Sandov pointed out that the e-mobility reform was included in the national recovery and resilience plan and that he was appointed to be responsible for coordinating policies for the development of e-mobility in Bulgaria.

The minister said 10,000 charging stations should be built so everyone can charge their electric car. Bulgaria will install 20-30 fast-charging hubs on major roads, while public charging points for EVs would be built in the central parts of more than 50 cities and large residential areas.

“The construction of charging infrastructure and electrification of vehicles will be accelerated, which will bring Bulgaria closer to the long-term European goals for greenhouse gas emissions reduction. Air pollution and urban noise pollution will be reduced by introducing low-emission zones in central city parts,” he added.

Sandov said 30 percent of fine particulate matter pollution in urban areas is caused by transport and that low-emission zones should be introduced in at least three Bulgarian cities, with an overall population of at least 1.5 million.

Bulgaria has largely reduced greenhouse emissions compared to the 1988 baseline, but emissions in the transport sector have increased by 40%, Sandov stressed.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

First car with sodium ion batteries entering mass production

First car with sodium ion batteries entering mass production

10 February 2026 - Changan presented the world's first mass-produced passenger vehicle equipped with sodium ion batteries, in partnership with CATL

croatia electric bus nrrp public transport subsidies

Croatian cities are purchasing 206 electric buses

02 February 2026 - Seventeen Croatian cities and municipalities have received EUR 143 million in total for the procurement of 206 electric buses

europe eleport loan eib ev charging

Eleport secures funds for EV charging expansion in Croatia, Slovenia

22 January 2026 - Teleport operates a total of 800 charging points including over 400 fast charging points in six EU countries

croatia zagreb park ride mayor tomislav tomasevic

Croatia’s Zagreb to add new park & ride locations

16 January 2026 - Zagreb, the capital of Croatia, currently has only one operational park & ​​ride location, in the Borongaj neighborhood