Bulgarian biofuel faces excise tax
Earlier in October, deputy finance minister Kiril Zhelev commented that biofuel producers will be obligated to pay excise duties until the European Commission issues a ruling saying that the tax incentive is not illegal state aid.
Bulgarian authorities have not submitted such a request over complications in calculating the costs of fossil fuels in the country, which is part of the package that has to be submitted to the EC.
Dimitar Zamfirov, the chairperson of the biofuels association, says the organisation would seek court action as soon it receives an official notification of the new excise duties, arguing that it was against the law.
Under Bulgarian legislation, biofuels bear a zero excise duty, but removing the tax incentives brought the collateral paid for their storage to the level of the excise on fossil fuels. Biodiesel will be taxed as gas oil with 600 leva (307 Euro's) for 1,000 litres, and the tax rate will be 1100 leva for 100 litres of pure bioethanol.
Biofuel producers have said that the measure would push them to bankruptcy and argued that the EC's state aid ruling was not mandatory, only recommended.
The same reason stalled the introduction of a lower tax on biofuel blends. Mineral diesel and unleaded petrol with a 4-5% content of biofuel are eligible for a 3% tax break, resulting in a net decrease of costs by 0.18 and 0.21 a litre, respectively.