Sofia Med Copper Fabricator Secures EBRD Loan to Raise Recycled Metal Use

EBRD lends €20mn to Sofia Med to boost recycled copper use and water efficiency in Bulgaria.
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Sofia Med Copper Fabricator Secures EBRD Loan to Raise Recycled Metal Use
Sofia Med

Sofia Med copper fabricator has secured a €20 million loan from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development to increase recycled metal use and reduce water waste at its Bulgarian operations. The financing supports Europe’s wider effort to strengthen domestic copper processing and improve resource efficiency.

The loan is also notable because it is the first EBRD financing in Bulgaria that allows the borrower to pay a lower interest rate if it meets green targets. These targets are linked to recycling and water efficiency, making the facility’s environmental performance part of its financing cost.

Sofia Med copper fabricator is owned by Greek metals group Viohalco and operates downstream rolling and extrusion lines. The company processes refined copper into tubes, sheets and profiles for industrial users.

Recycled Copper Becomes Strategic for European Fabricators

European copper fabricators are increasingly important because they sit close to final industrial demand. They convert refined copper and scrap into semi-finished products used in construction, power equipment, manufacturing, heating systems and infrastructure.

Sofia Med can raise the share of secondary metal in its feedstock if suitable scrap is available. This matters because recycled copper can reduce emissions, lower dependence on primary metal and support Europe’s circular economy goals.

However, Europe still exports large volumes of copper scrap. This limits local availability for refiners and fabricators, creating a policy challenge as Brussels tries to retain more strategic raw materials inside the region.

Brussels Pushes to Keep Copper Scrap in Europe

The loan comes as Brussels considers tighter export rules under its RESourceEU plan. The aim is to protect local supply of recyclable materials and support European processing capacity.

The EBRD and European Investment Bank are also backing projects across the copper value chain. Aurubis secured a €200 million EIB loan last September to expand its Pirdop tankhouse, showing that European institutions are targeting both refining and downstream fabrication.

The €20 million loan for Sofia Med is still only a limited part of the upgrades the site may need. Its impact will depend on how much copper scrap the company can secure and how quickly it can reduce water waste.

The Metalnomist Commentary

Sofia Med’s loan shows that recycled copper is becoming part of Europe’s industrial security agenda. The next challenge is not only financing upgrades, but keeping enough copper scrap inside Europe to feed refiners and fabricators.

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