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BAKU: Azeri agency downplays Iran-Armenia-Euro gas pipeline project

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  • BAKU: Azeri agency downplays Iran-Armenia-Euro gas pipeline project

    Azeri agency downplays Iran-Armenia-Europe gas pipeline project

    Turan news agency
    26 Mar 04

    BAKU

    The Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, the construction of which is expected
    to begin by late 2004, will go across Georgia's territory through the
    Black Sea and Ukraine to western Europe. Thus, the Iranian and Turkmen
    gas will go to the European Union countries bypassing Russia, Armenian
    Energy Minister Armen Movsisyan told reporters yesterday 25 March .

    The idea of laying the pipeline emerged in 1994, when the Georgian
    section of the gas pipeline supplying gas to Armenia from Russia was
    constantly out of operation due to chronic instability in Georgia. To
    create an alternative source of power supply, in 1995 Armenia and
    Tehran signed an agreement on laying the 141-km-long Iran-Armenia gas
    pipeline.

    Armenia, however, could not start implementing the project: either the
    sides could not agree on the gas price (Iran does not agree to supply
    gas at Russian prices), or financial problems arose etc. Since early
    2004, the Armenian side has been saying at all levels that a contract
    will be signed soon and the construction will begin this year.

    If we believe Movsisyan, Armenia is about to launch a large-scale
    project which in the first place jeopardizes the energy security and
    political ambitions of the country's strategic partner, Russia. The
    latter will sustain huge losses if gas is successfully transported via
    the Turkmenistan-Iran-Georgia-Ukraine-Western Europe route. Russia
    will lose at least transit tariffs from supplying Turkmen gas to
    Ukraine, gas markets in Georgia and Armenia, and partly in Ukraine,
    sales markets in eastern and partly western Europe, and finally the
    economic levers of exerting pressure on its CIS neighbours.

    Despite a very difficult geographic route, the project is feasible
    technically, but will require huge investments. The implementation of
    its subwater part will cost at least 2bn-3bn dollars. In addition,
    many players along the route have great expectations concerning
    transit tariffs, which in the long run will make the project
    commercially unattractive. Given the fact that Armenia's entire gas
    market, including its gas distribution and gas transport network, is
    managed by Russia, the project is unlikely to have bright future. The
    project is based not on realities of the current market economy, but
    on illusions of an Armenian myth similar to "Greater Armenia".
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