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In 2005 Bulgaria had 2, 425 kilometers of natural gas pipelines, 339 kilometers of oil pipelines, and 156 kilometers of pipelines for refined products.
The pipeline system was scheduled for substantial changes and additions, however.
The 279-kilometer Burgas-Alexandroupolis Pipeline, still under negotiation among Bulgaria, Greece, and Russia in 2006, would provide a bypass of the overloaded Bosporus Strait.
The line would enable Russian oil arriving at the Bulgarian oil port of Burgas to reach Greece ’ s Mediterranean port at Alexandroupolis.
A 900-kilometer U. S .- financed alternate route, known as the AMBO pipeline, would bring oil from Burgas across Bulgaria and Macedonia to the Albanian port of Vlore on the Adriatic Sea, bypassing both the Bosporus and Greece.
As of October 2006, approval of both pipelines was expected.
With international investment, Bulgaria began constructing a new domestic gas transportation network beginning in 2005.
The Russian Gazprom company planned a gas pipeline from Dimitrovgrad in eastern Bulgaria across Serbia, reaching the Adriatic Sea in Croatia.
Some 400 kilometers of the planned Nabucco Pipeline, bringing gas from Azerbaijan and Iran to Central Europe, were to cross Bulgaria sometime before 2011.

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