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On the Bulgarian market, the company markets the Voleex C10, Steed 5 and Hover H5 models, [7] and from 2013, the Voleex C30, Voleex C20R and the Hover H6. [8] [9] The company has over 12 representative offices throughout Bulgaria, [10] and in November 2012 it opened its first dealership outside the country, in Macedonia. [11]
In 2023, Turkey produced 1,486,393 motor vehicles, ranking as the 13th largest producer in the world (production peaked at 1,695,731 motor vehicles in 2017, when Turkey also ranked 13th). [1] Turkish automotive companies like TEMSA, Otokar and BMC are among the world's largest van, bus and truck manufacturers.
With this explicit policy, enacted between 1984 and 1989, the Bulgarian government forced Bulgaria's Turkish community – 900,000 people or 10 percent of the country's population, to change their names. The people affected were all ethnic Turks.
Between 2020 and 2022, the bilateral trade volume rose from $4.8 to $7.4 billion. 1,500 Turkish companies are active in Bulgaria and have invested more than two billion US dollars in the country. [ 5 ]
The construction cost of the production plant is budgeted at ₺ 22 billion (approx. US$1.2 billion). Employment of 4,323 people is planned at the production plant. [ 22 ] Annual production of 175,000 electric vehicles is planned, [ 23 ] but that may not be enough to avoid the risk to the economy of Turkey of increasing oil imports until 2040 ...
The association was established right after the proclamation of the Republic as "Turkish Travel Association" (Turkish: Türk Seyyahin Cemiyeti). It was renamed later to "Touring Club Turc" (Turkish: Türkiye Turing Klöbü). In 1930, the association received the legal status of a non-profit organization, and gained rights with regard to customs ...
This list includes people of Bulgarian origin born in what is today Turkey or Bulgarians mainly active in the Republic of Turkey. Antim I (1816–1888), first head of the Bulgarian Exarchate (from Kırklareli) Alexander Bogoridi (1822–1910), Ottoman statesman of Bulgarian origin (from Istanbul)
A contemporary Bulgarian registration plate (privately owned vehicle) Standard Bulgarian vehicle registration plates display black glyphs (alphanumeric characters) on a white background, together with – on the left-hand side of the plate – a blue vertical "EU strip" showing the flag of Europe (or, for older-registered cars, the flag of Bulgaria) and, below it, the country code for Bulgaria ...