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Tbilisi: Electricity imports set for October

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  • Tbilisi: Electricity imports set for October

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Oct 22 2004

    Electricity imports set for October

    By Christina Tashkevich

    Georgia will be able to receive imported electricity from Armenia
    already this October.

    The negotiations on the imports of energy from Armenia are currently
    underway, and according to the Minister of Energy Nika Gilauri, these
    imports are necessary in order to avoid an energy crisis in the
    country.

    Talking to reporters on Thursday, he added that imports should have
    been started in November but the process was sped up because of the
    latest sabotage on the high-voltage line Kartli-2.

    "We want to make this winter much better for the population as far as
    electricity supplies go," said the minister. He adds there should not
    be any problem of supplying Tbilisi with 24-hour light if not for
    some force majeur situation.

    On October 9 the Kartli-2 transmission line was knocked out of
    operation because of an explosion that officials blame on saboteurs.
    To transfer electricity from western Georgia to the east, officials
    have been forced to use 200-kilovolt low transmission lines instead
    of the 500-kilovolt Kartli-2.

    Meanwhile the repairs on the Kartli-2 are underway. According to
    Shota Maisuradze, the General Director of SakRusEnergo who is in
    charge of the repairs, the line will be operational again in one
    week. "One tower of the line is almost repaired, the other is half
    repaired," he told journalists on Thursday.

    Gilauri is sure that the energy system needs full rehabilitation.
    "There has not been a serious rehabilitation of the system which was
    working in force majeur state," he said adding there has already been
    four cases of sabotage on the high voltage line in the last two
    months.

    Currently the energy sector plans to provide Tbilisi, Kutaisi,
    Rustavi and Zugdidi with better energy supply. "We can offer only
    eight-hour supply for other regions of Georgia," says Gilauri.

    Meanwhile the government reports the sabotage group which attacked
    the Kartli-2 line was eliminated by Georgian special forces. "We will
    secure the system so that there is no other sabotage acts in
    Georgia," President Mikheil Saakashvili declared at a Wednesday
    briefing after announcing that the group was captured.

    Without mentioning where, when or how, President Saakashvili
    explained to journalists that "trespassers" were destroyed by
    Georgian law-enforcers. "The members of this gang planned to make the
    same type of sabotage along other sections of the power line but our
    law-enforcers foiled their plans," Saakashvili said.

    According to him, a special forces unit was sent to the whereabouts
    of saboteurs, but "the gang members refused to surrender and opened
    fire." As a result of the gunfight, the group was forced to
    surrender.
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