Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

[CENN] 71 Issue of the CENN Electronic Bulletin (English Version) {0

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • [CENN] 71 Issue of the CENN Electronic Bulletin (English Version) {0

    Caucasus Environmental NGO Network
    (CENN)

    71 Electronic Bulletin:
    Caucasus Environmental News

    Dear Colleagues! Dear Reader (DR)!

    Welcome to the August issue of the Caucasus Environmental News
    electronic bulletin prepared by participants of the Caucasus
    Environmental NGO Network (CENN).

    You are welcomed to share with us your opinions about the CENN bulletin.
    If you have any comments or questions, we will be happy to consider and
    answer.

    Thank you in advance for your assistance and cooperation.
    CENN


    ************************************************** *************************

    Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN) and the production of our
    electronic bulletin - Caucasus Environmental News have been funded by
    the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC).
    ************************************************** *************************

    ************************************************** *************************

    We are happy to inform you that current number of CENN members
    constitutes of 7120!
    Thanks for your interest in CENN!
    ************************************************** *************************



    VISIT CENN WEB SITE:
    www.cenn.org


    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    1. Announcements
    1.1. Request for Proposals (RFP) Caucasus Regional Biodiversity Project
    Theme of the Environmental Investment Programme
    1.2. Sustainable development and the environmental security

    2. Job, Internship and Study Opportunities
    2.1. REC Caucasus Internship Programme
    2.2. Ambassador Scholarship Program for Undergraduate International
    Students

    3. News from Georgia
    3.1. BP's pipeline to nowhere: Georgia halts oil giant's £2.4bn project

    3.2. Georgia interested in gas via Iran-Armenia pipeline
    3.3. Construction halts temporarily
    3.4. Environmental concerns halt BTC
    3.5. BTC responds to suspension
    3.6. Georgia tells BP Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline will be ready in
    time
    3.7. BP awards contracts for environmental investment program along the
    BTC pipeline route
    3.8. BP Chief, Georgian president discuss BTC
    3.9. Tetritskaro district Gamgeoba funds Social Service Network Program

    3.10. Agricultural activities in village Khaishi
    3.11. Georgia: Pipeline protesters demand compensation
    3.12. BTC construction in Borjomi gorge may restart Wednesday
    3.13. BP receives permission to restart construction in Borjomi gorge
    3.14. Incident in Tabatstskuri
    3.15. Construction of the BTC pipeline resumes

    4. News from Azerbaijan
    4.1. There are no problems in the construction of the BTC oil Pipeline
    4.2. The president of BP - Azerbaijan acquainted with the course of the
    BTC oil pipeline construction
    4.3. The ombudsmen of Azerbaijan has received the international auditor
    of the BTC oil pipeline
    4.4. The draft environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA)
    document produced by BP
    4.5. Experts talking on Caspian ecology draft programs
    4.6. Drinking water supply to be improved in Balakan province
    4.7. Azeri project cost 4 bln. dollars

    5. News from Armenia
    5.1. Ecology supervisors dressed in uniforms and armed
    5.2. Stop for green: Activists call on authorities to halt ecological
    destruction in Yerevan

    6. NGO News
    6.1. Dumpsite in Bakuriani

    7. International News
    7.1. New nuclear test monitoring station established in Kazakhsan
    7.2. New biomedical center on genetically modified crops to open in
    Kyrgyzstan
    7.3. Russia negotiating transport of spent nuclear fuel from Uzbekistan

    7.4. World Bank Challenged: Are the Poor Really Helped?

    8. New Publications
    8.1. Little Green Data Book 2004

    9. Calendar (International)
    9.1. Information Technologies - International Youth Conference
    9.2. Ninth European Ph.D workshop on International Climate Policy



    SUBSCRIBING INFORMATION


    1. ANNOUNCEMENTS
    1.1. REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (RFP) CAUCASUS REGIONAL BIODIVERSITY PROJECT
    THEME OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTMENT PROGRAMME

    For Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) Pipeline and Southern Caucasus Pipeline
    (SCP) Operated by BP

    Issuance Date: Monday 26th July 2004

    Closing Date and Time: 17:00 local time in United Kingdom, Friday 10th
    September

    BP, acting as Operator for and on behalf of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    Pipeline Company (BTC) and the South Caucasus Pipeline Company Ltd.
    (SCP), is seeking applications from eligible organizations to design and
    implement project under one of the key priority themes identified by BTC
    and SCP as part the Environmental Investment Programme (EIP).

    The EIP is divided up into a number of different themes, which were
    identified during a process of consultation with national and
    international stakeholders.

    Proposals are now sought for projects exclusively within the following
    EIP key priority theme: Caucasus Regional Biodiversity Project.
    Objective of the theme is to develop and implement a regional
    biodiversity project involving Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey to deliver
    actions that promote and conserve biodiversity. The project must address
    the socioeconomic, political and institutional sources of threats to and
    opportunities for conservation of biodiversity in the region and be
    undertaken within the framework of national biodiversity strategy and
    action plans and international conventions to which the governments are
    signatories.

    Applicants must be able to work in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey either
    through their own structures or through the other Implementing Partners,
    must be able to receive funds from BTC Co and SCP, be able to issue
    invoices, receipts and be registered for any relevant tax. Applicants
    will be expected to comply with all applicable local legal, civil and
    fiscal regulations.

    Proposals for this EIP theme are solicited through the Request For
    Proposals (RFP) document. The main purpose of the RFP is to provide
    instructions and guidance to applicants submitting proposals.

    Request for Proposal (RFP) documentation is available on the following
    web sites at: www.caspiandevelopmentandexport.com


    1.2. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY

    Socio-economical development of the country significantly depends on the
    stability and peace in the region. Sustainable management of the natural
    resources greatly impacts the socio-economical development of the
    country. Many conflicts around the world are driven by the lack of the
    natural resource or inequitable access and benefit sharing. "Recent
    studies have demonstrated though, that environmental stress can, under
    certain circumstances, contribute to conflict and violence, and that
    resource dependent communities are more likely to turn to violent means
    when their livelihoods are threatened."

    In June CENN has launched interactive poll on the "Sustainable
    development and the environmental security" to find out the position of
    the CENN audience on the inter correlation of these two factors:
    sustainable development and the environmental security. The results of
    this interactive poll revealed that all the respondents, who
    participated in this interactive think that the sustainable development
    is unachievable without the environmental security. Since they think
    that the development, poverty alleviation and sustainable management of
    the environment ultimately depend on the stability and peace in the
    region. 80% of the respondents think that the many conflicts around the
    world are driven by the scarcity of the natural resources or inequitable
    access to them and benefit sharing. 20% don't agree with this position
    statement.

    71% of the respondents consider that the environmental security is the
    relative public safety from environmental dangers caused by natural or
    human processes due to ignorance, accident, mismanagement or design and
    originating within or across national borders. 29% think that the
    environmental security is the maintenance of the physical surroundings
    of society for its needs without diminishing the natural stock

    All of the respondents believe that for the human being the security in
    its full sense means condition that is the consequence of the factors
    within five sectors: military, political, social, economical, and
    environmental.



    2. JOB, INTERNSHIP AND STUDY OPPORTUNITIES
    2.1. REC CAUCASUS INTERNSHIP PROGRAMME

    Objective: The Regional Environmental Centre for the Caucasus Internship
    Programme offers an opportunity to last year students and graduates from
    relevant academics departments from Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia to
    acquire basic knowledge of environmental issues, office and project
    management skills through a two week competitive training scheme, as
    well as specific work experience.

    Scope: Internship Programme consists of two stage competitive training
    courses including: 2 week general capacity building training in Tbilisi.
    Participants in the training will undergo a test, and selection will be
    made from among the winners to fill the vacancies of interns in the
    on-the-job training course at the REC Caucasus office.

    Dates:
    Two week general training course September 13-26, 2004
    One month on-the-job training September 27 - October 25, 2004

    Financial support: Selected candidates for the general training shall be
    provided with full travel and accommodation support by the organizers.
    The selected interns will be offered a stipend for the one-month period.

    Criteria for participants:
    o Applicant is to be a last year undergraduate student or graduate
    student at the time of application;
    o Applicant is to specialize in the field of biology, chemistry,
    geography, journalism, economics, law, agriculture, architecture,
    management and social sciences;
    o Applicant is to possess good knowledge of the language of the country
    whose citizen he/she is, also of the English and Russian languages.
    Computer literacy and ability to work in multicultural environment is a
    must;
    o Applicant is to be a resident of Armenia, Azerbaijan or Georgia.

    How to apply:

    Candidates must submit, an updated curriculum vitae (CV) and a letter of
    motivation describing his/her interest in the REC Caucasus Internship
    Programme (not more than 500 words). CV, letter of motivation and other
    relevant documents (recommendation letters, certificates, etc.) are to
    be delivered by post or via E-Mail to:

    Nino Gvazava
    74 Chavchavadze Ave., office 901
    0162 Tbilisi, Georgia
    Tel/Fax: +99532 253649/253648
    E-mail: [email protected]
    www.rec-caucasus.org
    Deadline for the application is 22 august 2004
    Only short-listed candidates will be contacted for the interview


    2.2. AMBASSADOR SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM FOR UNDERGRADUATE INTERNATIONAL
    STUDENTS

    Dear Students,

    As part of our goals to offer select students from around the world the
    opportunity to study at Michigan Tech and to support a globally aware
    academic community here in Houghton, Michigan, we are proud to announce
    the new Ambassador Scholarship Program for Undergraduate International
    Students.

    The Ambassador Scholarship carries a maximum award of $10,890 per year
    to be applied towards tuition. All new international undergraduate
    students may apply for the Ambassador Scholarship. Awards will be based
    on the following criteria.

    o Academic achievement
    o Evidence of leadership
    o English language competency
    o Major field of academic interest
    o Region of origin
    o Financial need

    Students receiving awards must maintain a 2.75 grade point average at
    the end of each academic year and must provide evidence of leadership at
    MTU in order to remain eligible for the continuation of the scholarship.
    Students must also be enrolled full time each semester for continuation
    of the award.

    Ambassador Scholarship Program application forms are available at
    Michigan Tech's Center for International Education or can be printed
    from the electronic version. Completed forms should be returned to CIE
    with the admission application and all supporting documents.

    We wish you success in your application process and look forward to
    welcoming you to Michigan Technological University.

    James P. Cross Ph.D.
    Executive Director
    Center for International Education
    Mary Anne Brunner
    Director, Office of International Services
    Center for International Education
    For the additional information please see:
    http://www.mtu.edu/cie/is/scholarships/ambassador.html



    3. NEWS FROM GEORGIA
    3.1. BP'S PIPELINE TO NOWHERE: GEORGIA HALTS OIL GIANT'S ³2.4BN PROJECT

    Source: The Observer, July 25, 2004

    The government of the former Soviet republic of Georgia has ordered BP
    to halt work on a section of a controversial £2.4 billion Caspian oil
    pipeline project. The Minister of Environment of Georgia, Tamar
    Lebanidze, said the company failed to provide contractually required
    environmental information.

    Mrs. Lebanidze said BP should not have started laying the 42 inch-wide
    pipes until her government was convinced that BP had in place the best
    technology to ensure it could withstand both landslides and terrorist
    attacks.

    BP was on site for just one week in Borjormi before being told to stop.
    Borjormi is considered an area of outstanding natural beauty with a
    mineral water spring that provides a 10th of Georgia's exports.

    The minister added that she would have rejected the scheme agreed by
    former president Edward Shevardnadze, who was forced out of office last
    November. Mrs. Lebanidze fears oil leaks could devastate the region.

    At 1,087 miles, the Caspian export pipeline will be the world's longest,
    taking Azerbaijani and Kazakhstani oil through Georgia to Turkey. It is
    backed by US President George W Bush, who is keen to reduce US reliance
    on Middle Eastern and Russian oil.

    James Leaton of the World Wildlife Fund said: 'BP considers itself above
    the law on this project and has no respect for the environment.'

    The news will take the gloss off BP second-quarter results, out this
    week. Net profits could beat last quarter's record £2.64 billion.


    3.2. GEORGIA INTERESTED IN GAS VIA IRAN-ARMENIA PIPELINE

    Source: Interfax, July 26, 2004

    Georgia is interested in the idea of importing Iranian gas via the
    Iran-Armenia pipeline, Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zurabishvili
    said in an interview with the Armenian press during a visit to Yervan
    this week.

    The Georgian authorities are ready to look at this idea as they aim to
    develop transit shipments through the Caucuses, she said.

    Earlier, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian was cited as saying
    that in talks held in Teheran at the start of July with Georgian
    President Mikhail Saakashvili and Iranian authorities on cooperation in
    Iranian gas transportation to Europe, two transit options were
    discussed. One envisages transportation through Armenia and the other
    through Azerbaijan. Iranian and Georgian media have reported that
    Georgia's Energy Ministry prefers the Azerbaijan option.

    A government delegation from Armenia, headed by Prime Minister Andranik
    Margarian, will visit Tbilisi next week, the Armenian government told
    Interfax. The delegation will include Energy Minister Armen Movsisian.
    During the visit, there will be a meeting of the intergovernmental
    economic cooperation committee and discussions on cooperation in the
    energy sector, including gas.

    Earlier, Georgian Energy Minister Niki Gilauri said Saakashvili had
    reached an agreement on natural gas supplies via Azerbaijan while he was
    in Iran. The minister said deliveries could begin in January-February
    2005.


    3.3. CONSTRUCTION HALTS TEMPORARILY

    Source: Interfax, July 26, 2004

    BP, the operator for the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    pipeline, halted work on the pipeline in the Borjomi gorge in Georgia on
    July 23, 2004 at the request of the Georgian Environmental Protection
    and Natural Resource Ministry, Tamara Lebanidze, press secretary to the
    Georgia natural resource minister, said at a press conference in Friday.

    She said that BP is meeting all its obligations to ensure environmental
    safety when building the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. As the Borjomi
    gorge is a protected area, on this 17-km section of the pipeline "the
    company should provide additional environmental protection guarantees,
    so that the risk connected with the implementation of this global
    project are reduced to a minimum," Lebanidze said.

    She said that, according to experts, on the Borjomi gorge section of the
    pipeline it is necessary "to deepen the pipeline trenches and to put in
    protective barriers when they are being laid." Lebanidze said that she
    is confident that the pace of construction in Georgia will not suffer as
    a result and that the work will be completed on schedule.

    A source in the BP office in Georgia told Interfax that construction on
    all other sections of the pipeline is continuing as usual. Over 60% of
    all work has been carried out since May 2003, 207 km of pipes have been
    welded and 138 km of pipes have been laid in trenches.

    "The temporary halt in work will not affect the launch date for the
    Georgian section of the pipeline," the source said, adding that work
    will be completed by the end of this year, as planned.


    3.4. ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS HALT BTC

    Source: Civil Georgia, July 27, 2004

    Construction of the strategic Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline was
    halted for at least two weeks on July 23, 2004 after the Georgian
    authorities demanded the tightening of environmental security measures
    along the 17-km long section of the pipeline that passes through the
    ecologically sensitive Borjomi valley, in western Georgia.

    BP, which heads-up the international consortium running the construction
    of the BTC, says that the halt in Borjomi will not be a set back for the
    $3.6-billion, 1750-km pipeline, which is projected to carry 800 thousand
    barrels of crude oil per-day from Azerbaijan to the Turkish
    Mediterranean port of Ceyhan via Georgia.

    "We are complying with the Georgian government's request and have
    suspended construction works temporarily in the Borjomi sections of the
    rout; however construction activities are ongoing in all other parts of
    the route," Rusudan Medzmariashvili, a spokesperson of the BP Tbilisi
    office, told Civil Georgia on July 23.

    The Georgian Ministry of Environment expects BP to submit paperwork
    within two weeks guaranteeing specific environmental protections for a
    section of the pipeline that passes close to the Borjomi valley, famous
    for its mineral waters and unique ecology.

    "We are seeking the observation of stricter environmental safety
    measures in the Borjomi valley. The Borjomi district is of vital
    importance, due to its natural resources. Thus, we are demanding
    additional safety guarantees," Georgian Minister of Environment Tamar
    Lebanidze said at a news briefing on July 23, 2004.

    The Minister also said that since the Borjomi valley is an area
    susceptible to landslides, the construction works are endangered. "We
    demand additional guarantees, which will envisage deeper pipe-laying in
    order to protect both the pipeline and the environment against
    landslides," Tamar Lebanidze said.

    The Minister's statement was preceded by an open letter from more than
    50 employees of various geological and ecological organizations and
    institutions addressed to the Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili.

    "The entire portion of the pipeline on the territory of the Borjomi
    region is distinguished by high seismic activity. Hence, strict
    observation of safety measures is of vital importance," the open letter
    reads.

    The Georgian Ministry plans to assess the situation within the next two
    weeks in order to further determine a plan of action. However, the
    Georgian Ministry of Environment claims that the request does not
    envisage a long-term suspension of the project or the changing of the
    route.

    "We recognize the international commitment, which the Georgian
    government has undertaken by giving a go-ahead to the project. So, its
    long-term suspension is not anticipated," the Georgian Minister of
    Environment, said.

    "But we urge BP to also meet its commitments undertaken during the 2002
    November agreement, particularly, the fulfillment of paragraph 9 of the
    agreement which directly refers to the Borjomi portion of the oil
    pipeline," Tamar Lebanidze added.

    The 17-kilometer portion of the route, which runs through the Borjomi
    valley, has been a matter of controversy since 2002. The Georgian
    authorities gave its go-ahead to the construction of the BTC through the
    Borjomi valley after burdensome talks with the Georgian International
    Oil Corporation and BP in December 2002. The Georgian leadership claimed
    that consent was given only after the BP provided "unprecedented
    measures of ecological security."

    The Borjomi valley is a picturesque, mountainous region with beautiful
    gorges, pine forests and ski resorts. Georgian and foreign experts
    believe that an oil leakage, caused either by a natural disaster
    (landslide, earthquake) or the human factor (sabotage, mismanagement)
    would inflict irreparable damage on this area, which is also famous for
    its mineral waters that are exported to dozens of countries.

    Manana Kochladze, of the Georgian non-governmental organization Green
    Alternative, is among those critics of the BTC who were lobbying for a
    change of the pipeline route. Manana Kochladze won the annual Goldman
    Environmental Prize, the best-known award for environmentalists, in
    April for advocating better environmental security guarantees for the
    BTC.

    "From the very beginning we were against the construction of the oil
    pipeline via Borjomi, since there are no sufficient guarantees that the
    BP-led project would not have a negative impact on the fragile ecology
    of the region," Manana Kochladze of the Green Alternative told Civil
    Georgia.

    She hailed the decision of the Ministry of the Environment to halt
    construction, however added, "two weeks are not enough to determine the
    environmental safety measures."


    3.5. BTC RESPONDS TO SUSPENSION

    Source: The Georgian Messenger, July 28, 2004

    The builders of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline have provided all
    the necessary documents regarding environmental impact and protection,
    says the head of the project.

    On July 23, 2004 the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources of
    Georgia suspended construction of the pipeline through the
    environmentally sensitive Borjomi gorge, saying it needed time to
    examine the documentation on the safety measures taken by BP.

    Minister of Environment Tamar Lebanidze added last week that BP did not
    fulfill some of the conditions of the agreement on the BTC construction
    issued by the ministry on November 30, 2002 concerning the Borjomi
    gorge.

    Meanwhile, the company itself claims safety and security are their key
    priorities. "This 17 kilometer section of the pipeline is a very
    important one," said CEO of the BTC Co. Michael Townshend on July 27. He
    added at a special press conference on Tuesdaythat the ministry must
    analyze security measures taken by BP in the Borjomi gorge until August
    2.

    Mr. Townshend claims that the company provided the government with all
    possible documentation on security measures still in April but adds "we
    are working with the government to provide them with all necessary
    information."

    The BTC Co denies the route of the BTC can be changed in order to pass
    the Borjomi gorge. "I can tell you with an absolute assurance that the
    route would not be changed," he said.

    "President Saakashvili met with the president of BP group Lord John
    Brown in London and assured him that there will be no delays in
    pipeline's construction," said Mr. Townshend adding the first oil would
    run the pipeline as scheduled in 2005. BP is the leading investor in the
    1,750 km, USD 3.6 billion pipeline.

    "We are currently working in the Borjomi region to stabilize slopes and
    fight with erosion caused by recent heavy rains," said Townshend.
    According to him, "We have to make sure everything is kept as safe as
    possible."

    According to Michael Townshend, security of the pipeline must be
    provided by both sides, BP and the government of three countries.
    "Government has its obligations," he stated.

    Asked about the possible damages of the suspension to the construction,
    Townshend replied "We are evaluating damages." According to him, the
    company had to move a lot of people and equipment out of the
    construction section in Borjomi. Meanwhile, NGOs raising their voices
    over the latest events regarding the BTC as well. The Georgian NGO
    coalition "East-West Energy Corridor" addressed a letter to the EBRD,
    IFC and WB asking them to respond to the situation.

    According to the coalition, by not fulfilling the conditions under the
    government's environmental permit issued in 2002, this permit cannot
    stay in force. As the letter reads, "the Ministry of Environment
    requested to increase the depth of pipe burial and some additional
    protective measures as the precondition for permitting construction
    activities in Borjomi."

    Keti Dgebuadze, Coordinator of Georgian NGO Coalition, stresses "the
    very passive and indifferent attitude" of the lending organizations like
    the IFC towards the fulfillment of the conditions and to the situation
    in Borjomi.

    The NGO coalition also appeals to all stakeholders "to be more
    responsible towards the unique nature of Borjomi region, as well as to
    the BTC project," pointing out this project is "extremely important" for
    Georgia can be damaged by "mismanagement and violation of environmental
    law."


    3.6. GEORGIA TELLS BP BAKU-TBILISI-CEYHAN PIPELINE WILL BE READY IN TIME

    Source: Interfax, July 28, 2004

    BP has received the assurance of Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili
    that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline project will be completed on
    time, BP Chairman Lord John Browne said at a quarterly report
    presentation on Tuesday. Construction is set to end in 2004.

    Browne said that BP had temporarily stopped construction of the
    pipeline. Work was stopped at the Borjomi valley in Georgia at the
    request of the Georgian Environment and Natural Resources Ministry.

    Tamara Lebanidze, The Ministry of Environment of Georgia, stated, that
    BP needs to provide additional environmental protection guarantees so
    that the risks linked with this global project can be reduced to a
    minimum.

    The BP office in Georgia told Interfax earlier that over 60% of all the
    work had been completed with 207km of welded pipe and 138km of pipeline
    laid.

    A temporary stoppage in construction work will not influence the launch
    term for the Georgian section of the pipeline, the BP office said.


    3.7. BP AWARDS CONTRACTS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTMENT PROGRAM ALONG THE
    BTC PIPELINE ROUTE

    Press Release

    BP as operator of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil export pipeline and
    South Caucasus (SCP) gas projects is pleased to announce that in June
    2004 it has awarded contract to NACRES - Noach's Arch Center for
    Recovery of Endangered Species NGO, to implement the "Ecosystem and
    Species Conservation in Georgia: Brown Bear Project". This is the second
    contract award in the framework of the Environmental Investment Program
    (EIP) for the BTC and SCP projects.

    the principal objective of the Environmental Investment Program (EIP) is
    delivery of actions that are of ebnefit in the promotion and
    conservation of biodiversity. The USD 3 mln EIP is divided into number
    of themes, which were identified through the Environmental and Social
    Impact Assessment studies and trough the process of consultations with
    the national and international stakeholders. Themes include: Rare
    species conservation management; Sustainable forestry; Capacity building
    for NGOs, Environmental Education, etc.

    A request for proposals for the rare species conservation management was
    publicly issued in late September 2003. Proposals were ought specially
    for the Caucasian Black Grouse and Brown Bear conservation management.
    However proposals related to other rare species were also considered, if
    associated with pipeline. The contract for the Caucasian Black Grouse
    research, monitoring and conservation management project was awarded to
    the Georgian Center for the Conservation of Wildlife NGO in January
    2004.

    Through a review process, the Ecosystems and Species Conservation in
    Georgia: Brown Bear project was now selected for funding under the above
    theme. The grant award for the project is USD 250, 000.

    Project activities include estimation of the Brown Bear population
    parameters within the Trialeti range, appraisal of current levels of
    threats, description of the underlying reasons for loss of bear habitat,
    development of a Bear Conservation Action Plan for the Trialeti range,
    establishment of basis for community involvement in conservation
    activities.

    The project will be implemented by NACRES Noach's Arch Center for
    Recovery of Endangered Species, an NGO founded in 1989 to research and
    safeguard biodiversity, especially endanger species, in Georgia and
    South Caucasus and to promote public awareness in the field of
    environmental protection.

    Project activities stared in June 2004 and will finish in May 2006.

    We believe that the Environmental Investment Program gives BP and the
    selected NGOs a unique opportunity to make a positive difference to the
    preservation of Georgia's wildlife.

    For the more information please contact:
    Communication Department, BP Georgia
    Tel: (995 32) 59 34 00
    Fax: (995 32) 59 34 80


    3.8. BP CHIEF, GEORGIAN PRESIDENT DISCUSS BTC

    Source: Civil Georgia, July 28, 2004

    Lord Browne, the BP chief executive, has been in contact with Georgian
    President Micheal Saakashvili over problems regarding the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline and confirmed that construction at
    the Borjomi section of the route in western Georgia has stopped, the
    Guardian reported on July 28, 2004.

    He said there were "security" issues to be dealt with and also that he
    had reassurances that work would not be held up.

    Construction of the BTC was halted for at least two weeks on July 23,
    2004 after the Georgian authorities demanded the tightening of
    environmental security measures along the 17-km long section of the
    pipeline that passes through the ecologically sensitive Borjomi valley.

    BP leads the international consortium that runs the construction of the
    BTC, designed to carry Azeri oil, via Georgia and the Turkish
    Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, to western markets.


    3.9. TETRITSKARO DISTRICT GAMGEOBA FUNDS SOCIAL SERVICE NETWORK PROGRAM

    Source: Georgian Messenger, July 28, 2004

    Community Investment Program-East has been working in Tetritkaro
    district for over a year now. It is initiated and funded by BP and its
    partners in BTC/SCP projects and is implemented by the consortia of
    Georgian NGOs with leadership of the international organization Mercy
    Corps.

    One-program partners, Curatio International Foundation is working on
    implantation of the Social Service Network models that is to equip local
    ambulatories, provide medicines, train medical personnel and have
    medical group visiting different villages. A good example of this
    program is regular visits of the Tsinskaro ambulatory team to the
    village Ivanovka where all medical costs are by local businessman.

    After successful implementation of the Ivanovka model Tetritskaro
    district Gamgeoba has kindly expressed willingness to allocate 500GEL
    each month as a co-funder to cover the expenses of he medical team
    visits to the villages of Khaishi, Kosolari, Samshvilde, Didi and Patara
    Durnuli, Tsintskaro and Skhalsopeli. This amount will also provide
    salaries to the local nurses while Community Investment Program East
    will provide free medical equipment to the ambulatories of Kosolari,
    Khaishi, Akhalsopeli and Samshvilde ambulatories.

    This initiative is a very good example of collaboration among community,
    local government and NGOs and serves as a strong foundation for building
    Civil Society.


    3.10. AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES IN VILLAGE KHAISHI

    Source: Georgian Messenger, July 28, 2004

    Within the framework of the Community Investment Program East initiated
    and funded by BP and its partners BTC/SCP projects Mercy Corps and its
    partner organizations have been implementing various activities in the
    communities along the pipeline route for the purpose of mobilizing and
    empowering them.

    In village Khaishi of Tetritskaro district CIP-E partner Biological
    Association Elkana has been successfully implementing agricultural
    activities. With assistance from this organization all of the families
    of the village have receive high quality fruit tree saplings of their
    choice and the monitoring has shown that all of the trees are blooming
    now.

    According to the request of the village population Elkana has
    demonstrated a model of Autumn wheat seed production and planted
    certified wheat on 5 hectares of the village land. This model has
    already shown its results - the harvest has been equally distributed
    among the population of Khaishi and created bank for fruit second
    reproduction seed material. Besides, in September each family will
    receive another lot of elite of first reproduction seed material and as
    a result all of them will seed 1 hectare of land and receive harvest the
    next year.

    It is important that implementation of this program will help
    Tetritskaro villages along pipeline to generate elite or first
    reproduction certificated wheat seeds that will enable the population o
    produce quality seeds for 3-4 years.


    3.11. GEORGIA: PIPELINE PROTESTERS DEMAND COMPENSATION

    Source: The Georgian Messenger, July 30, 2004

    Residents of areas adjoining planned Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline fear
    construction work may trigger landslides

    For over a month, huge pipes over a metre in diameter have lined the
    roads leading to mountain villages in the Borjomi and Akhaltsikhe
    districts of Georgia. Destined to form a section of the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, BTC, oil pipeline, they have become a focus of
    protest in surrounding villages, all of which lie in an active landslide
    zone.

    "Heavy rain is enough to cause landslides that put our village at risk,"
    said David Gogoladze, of Dgvari village in Borjomi. "Imagine what impact
    40 tone vehicles would have." Villagers are appealing for resettlement
    or an end to the construction.

    When it is competed, the BTC will have the capacity to carry one million
    barrels of oil a day. Plans for the project began in 1995 and oil is
    scheduled to start flowing in spring 2005. Georgia has the shortest
    section, at 248 kilometers, but had the lengthiest and most problematic
    negotiations. Construction work has been met with constant hostility
    from the local population, both in Kvemo Kartli Samtskhe-Javakheti,
    eastern and southern provinces respectively.

    The mountain villages of Dgvari, Tadzrisi, Tiseli an Tkemalana sit on
    the landslide zone. A total of 300 families live there and they say the
    construction work has multiplied the risk to their homes. "Back under
    the Communists, there was a study on this but the documents have
    disappeared. There should have been a new geological study before this
    decision was made," said head of the Tiseli community Giorgi
    Chumburidze.

    The ministry of the interior has registered seventy instances of
    picketing along the length of the pipeline. In June, riot police were
    used to disperse an action in the village of Sartichala, in the
    Gardabani district.

    Residents of Dgvari village recently blockaded construction workers on
    the road adjoining their village, demanding resettlement. "We need money
    or a plot of land to enable us to go elsewhere. I love my village, but I
    cannot sacrifice my family for it," said villager Mamuka Gogoladze.

    BP, who will operate the pipeline, says almost 24 million lari or 12
    million US dollars in compensation to people living within the Georgian
    section of the living within the Georgian section of the construction
    zone.

    In a letter to the villagers, BP manager ED Johnson wrote, "The route
    that has been chosen for the pipeline is safe and landslide activity
    poses no threat to the pipeline, However, I agree that the situation is
    grave and needs an immediate response from the government."

    The local authorities have became indifferent to road blockades,
    however, so villagers eventually resorted o taking local journalist
    Tsaulina Malazonia hostage, demanding that officials from Tbilisi come
    to visit. As a result, the head f the Borjomi municipality, Ivane
    Gelashvili, promised that the prime minister would receive some village
    representatives shortly to discuss their problems.

    "If we are deceived again, we will reblockade the road. They have left
    us no alternative," said villager Leva Lomidze, "In 30 years, we have
    been offered no solution. We have no time for politics, cinema or the
    Olympic Games. All we care about is the weather. Rain is forecast for
    tomorrow so I will spend today fixing holes in my house. It has already
    been destroyed once and I rebuilt it. But I will have nothing left if
    that happens again."

    While the BTC has become a visible and dramatic focus of discontent, it
    has also offered villagers new leverage with authorities, which have
    been ignoring them for years. Two weeks ago, BP representatives
    succeeded in lifting a road blockade by promising to use their influence
    with the local authorities on behalf of the villagers.

    A precedent may have been set.


    3.12. BTC CONSTRUCTION IN BORJOMI GORGE MAY RESTART WEDNESDAY

    Source: Interfax, August 5, 2004

    Construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline in the Borjomi gorge
    may restart on August 5, 2004, BP- Azerbaijan President David Woodward
    said on August 4, 2004, after two days of consultations between
    investors and the Georgian government in Tbilisi.

    He said that the company hopes that it will be able to restart work from
    August 5, 2004.

    Tamara Lebanidze, the Minister of Environment of Georgia, stated that
    earlier the construction of this section of the pipeline, which was
    halted on July 23, 204 would restart at the start of this week. Mr.
    Woodward said that at the final stage, constructive meetings were held
    with the Georgian prime minister and that at the moment there are no
    problems.

    At the request of the Ministry of Environment of Georgia construction in
    the Borjomi gorge was halted to analyze safety measures for the
    construction and operation of the pipeline.

    The ministry said that on the Borjomi gorge section of the pipeline it
    is necessary to deepen the pipeline trenches and to put in protective
    barriers when they are being laid.


    3.13. BP RECEIVES PERMISSION TO RESTART CONSTRUCTION IN BORJHOMI GORGE

    Source: Interfax, August 5, 2004

    The Georgian Environment and Natural Resource Ministry has given BP, the
    operator for the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline,
    permission to restart construction in Borjomi gorge, Georgian Natural
    Resource Minister Tamara Lebanidze said Wednesday.

    Mrs. Lebanidze said that the ministry explained its position in full to
    the operator and was satisfied with the guarantees received from BP.

    "By August 6, 2004 the company will invite experts to Georgia, who will
    develop a special plan for the integrated management of the oil
    pipeline," she said.

    The minister said that along with this, it has been agreed to lay pipes
    in the Borjomi gorge at a greater depth than had originally been
    planned. "Additional protective measures will also be used," she said.


    3.14. INCIDENT IN TABATSTSKURI

    Source: Rustavi2, August 9, 2004

    The residents of the village Tabatstskuri held a protest rally against
    the Construction of the Georgian section of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
    pipeline.

    According to the spread news, the members of the rally threw stones
    towards the law enforcement agents, who had come at the site.

    Due to the incident the two police officers of the regional police
    department were slightly injured.


    3.15. CONSTRUCTION OF THE BTC PIPELINE RESUMES

    Source: The Georgian Messenger, August 10, 2004

    BP resumed construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline on August 6,
    2004, after the Georgian government issued its permission to do so while
    Mikheil Saakashvili was on three-day visit to the United Stats.

    The Georgian president took the opportunity to call on BP to guarantee
    the safety of the Borjomi gorge region through which the BTC pipeline
    currently being constructed.

    "BP must take all measures to ensure the ecological safety of the
    Borjomi gorge. The company tried to complain to us in Washington but it
    will not work," he said at a press conference in Washington.

    Mr. Saakashvili added that the Georgian government had demanded that BP
    laid the pipes deeper in the gorge to protect the pipeline from natural
    disasters and from possible terrorists acts as well as to buy the
    special equipment needed to guarantee the ecology of the region.

    "The BTC pipeline has very great value for us, because this project
    underlines the strategic importance of Georgia. But the health of the
    citizens is also important for me," said Saakashvili.

    He claimed that BP had fulfilled all the governmental conditions for now
    and as a result the construction had been resumed. "BP ha taken the
    first steps to satisfy the demands of the Georgian sides," said
    Saakashvili. "But the pipes will not be operated if all safety
    conditions are not met."

    The Minister of Environment and Natural Resources Tamar Lebanidze told
    journalists this week that the government accepted the guarantees to BP.
    But she added that some "additional security mechanisms" would be
    considered during construction.

    The Georgian Ministry of Environment suspended the construction of the
    pipeline in the Borjomi district for environmental reasons on July 23,
    2004. The Ministry claimed the construction had violated several items
    of the environmental contract and demanded that BP provide all necessary
    documents on safety measures being taken in the region.

    Meanwhile the United States is carefully monitoring the process of
    construction of the BTC pipeline. During her last visit to Georgia last
    month, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Beth Jones visited various
    sections of the pipeline. Talking at a press briefing in Tbilisi she
    said, "I am convinced of the environmental integrity and sanctity of the
    pipeline. The security issues involved with the pipeline are being taken
    are of."

    Mrs. Jones evaluated the importance of the pipeline for Georgia. "The
    construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and
    Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum gas pipeline which transit through Georgia allow
    the country to find its independence in the energy sector," she said.

    BP always denied neglecting environmental damage and ecological safety.
    On the contrary, it claimed, safety and security are key priorities. "We
    have to make sure everything is kept as safe as possible," GEO of the
    BTC Company Michael Townshend commented on the issue recently in
    Tbilisi.

    But environmentalists claim that these are mere words, "BP has made all
    kinds of promises about how the BTC project would boost Georgian
    sovereignty, yet as soon as Georgian law no longer fits their schedule,
    they violate it without hesitation," said James Leaton of WWF.

    The environmental groups worry about the fate of the Borjomi district,
    particularly its national park and mineral water springs. The Georgian
    media even quoted the Minister of Environment Lebanidze saying she would
    not have approved the route through Borjomi selected by BP in November
    2002, because of the risk of environmental damage.

    Be that as it may, the route cannot be changed says BP. "I can tell you
    with absolute assurance that the route will not be changed," Townshend
    said.

    But environmental group Friends of the Earth question the quality of
    construction "BP has repeatedly said that it will construct this
    pipeline to the highest standards," said representative Friends of the
    Earth Hannah Griffiths. "But whenever the standards get in the way of
    the construction schedule, they get jettisoned."



    4. NEWS FROM AZERBAIJAN
    4.1. THERE ARE NO PROBLEMS IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE BTC OIL PIPELINE

    Source: http://www.centran.ru/, July 15, 2004

    This announcement was made by the vice premier of Azerbaijan Abid
    Sharipov, who visited Turkey in order to observe the construction works
    on the Turkish section of the BTC oil pipeline. The works are carried
    out in the rapid tempo.

    During this visit was held meeting of the vice premier of Azerbaijan
    with the management of the BOTAS and the Ministry of Energy of Turkey.
    "There are no problems connected to the construction of the pipeline. In
    Turkey is held the construction of the four pumping stations. Moreover
    there are no problems on the two sections of the pipeline and in the
    construction of the terminal. In the end of this year the works would be
    completed," - stated vice premier. Mr. Sharipov mentioned that
    construction works are carried out according o the schedule in
    Azerbaijan and Georgia as well. Contractor of the construction works on
    the Azerbaijan section of the pipeline is Greek company Consolidated
    Contractors International Company, Georgian section -- Spie Capag/
    Petrofag that is the contractor of the construction of the pumping
    stations on the territories of the both counties as well. Contractor of
    the construction works on the Turkish section of the pipeline is BOTAS.

    The length of the BTC pipeline is 1762 km, out of which 443 km is on
    territory of Azerbaijan, 249 km - Georgia, 1070 km - Turkey. Carrying
    capacity of the pipeline is 50 mln. tones per year. The construction
    works are planned to be completed in the beginning of the year of 2005.


    4.2. THE PRESIDENT OF BP - AZERBAIJAN ACQUAINTED WITH THE COURSE OF THE
    BTC OIL PIPELINE CONSTRUCTION

    Source: http://www.regnum.ru/, July 20, 2004

    The president of BP-Azerbaijan David Woodward, became familiar with the
    course of the BTC oil pipeline construction in Georgia. "We are sure
    that the first oil will flow through the BTC pipeline in early of the
    next year," stated Mr. Woodward during the meeting with the journalists.

    The head of the BP Azerbaijan visited Georgia in the last Saturday. Mr.
    Woodward participated in the session of the Georgian National Security
    of Counsel that was dedicated to the construction works along the BTC
    route. Moreover, he visited the sites of the pipeline constructions. Mr.
    Woodward noted that the works on the Georgian section of the BTC are
    held according to the schedule, and there is no necessity to increase
    security measures of the pipeline construction concerning the situation
    in Georgia.


    4.3. THE OMBUDSMEN OF AZERBAIJAN HAS RECEIVED THE INTERNATIONAL AUDITOR
    OF THE BTC OIL PIPELINE

    Source: CAN, July 26, 2004

    Elmira Suleimanova, ombudsman of Azerbaijan, has received the
    international auditor of the BTC oil pipeline Robert Bekli. During this
    visit Mrs. Suleimanova spoke about the human rights protection issue in
    Azerbaijan. Moreover there were discussed the concerns and the issues of
    ensuring the rights of the BTC pipeline works and the people living
    along the BTC pipeline route. Cooperation in this fields suggested by
    Mr. Bekli was met with the approval by Mrs. Suleimanova.

    Mrs. Sileimanova suggested to carry out the works in education of the
    people along the pipeline concerning their economical, social and
    environmental rights and in instruction them about cases of emergency.


    4.4. THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT (ESIA)
    DOCUMENT PRODUCED BY BP

    Source: State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan, AzerTag,
    August 5, 2004

    BP as the operator on behalf of its partners in Azerbaijan International
    Operating Company (AIOC) announces that as part of its work programme
    for Azeri-Chirag and Deepwater Gunashli (ACG) Full Field Development
    (FFD) Phase-3, the Draft Environmental and Social Impact Assessment
    (ESIA) Document has been produced and published by BP on behalf of AIOC
    partners.

    The document examines the potential environmental and social impacts of
    the full ACG Phase-3 project activities, and describes the recommended
    mitigation measures.

    There are the following major components of the Phase-3 project:
    o An offshore Production, Compression, Water Injection and Utilities
    platform (PCWU), bridge linked to an offshore Drilling, Utilities and
    Quarters platform (DUQ) will be put in place at Deep Water Gunashli
    sector of the offshore ACG contract area;
    o Two subsea water injection well developments will be installed
    approximately 4km to the northwest and 5km to the southwest of the PWCU
    and DUQ platforms;
    o New in-field pipelines will be installed offshore to facilitate export
    of oil and gas into the existing Azeri project pipeline infrastructure
    that extends to the onshore terminal;
    o The existing onshore oil and gas reception facilities at Sangachal
    Terminal will be further expanded, within the existing terminal
    boundary, to process incoming crude oil to a specification suitable for
    its export.

    Central Azeri C&WP jacket successfully launched

    As reports AzerTAj om the Azerbaijan International Operating Company's
    (AIOC) press release, the jacket for the Central Azeri Compressor and
    Water Injection Platform (C&WP) sailed away on Saturday, July 31, from
    Heydar Aliyev Baku Deepwater Jackets Factory (BDJF) yard to be installed
    at its permanent location in the Azeri field. The jacket reached its
    location and was successfully launched into the water yesterday, August
    1.

    The parties to the Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli (ACG) Production Sharing
    Agreement are: BP (operator - 34.1%), Unocal (10.3%), SOCAR (10%), INPEX
    (10.,0%), Statoil (8,6%), ExxonMobil (8%), TPAO (6.8%), Devon (5.6%),
    Itochu (3.9%), Amerada Hess (2.7%).

    The jacket was set on STB-1 Transportation barge on July 18th, 2004 and
    since then had been sea-fastened ready to sail away to its location at
    Central Azeri (CA). The C&WP jacket will be installed next to the
    Drilling and Production Platform (PDQ) jacket. We expect offshore
    installation activities to be completed by the end of September 2004.

    The jacket has been fully built in the country using local construction
    infrastructure including BDJF facilities. It is the second largest
    structure after the CA PDQ jacket to be installed in the Caspian Sea.
    The jacket has 12 piles. The total weight of these piles, which are 128
    metres long each, is 6,120 tonnes, while the total weight of the jacket
    itself is 13250 tonnes including the floatation tanks. The height of the
    jacket is 143 metres and it will be installed at the location where the
    depth of the water is 128 metres.

    The offshore installation will use two strategic vessels: the Derrick
    Barge Azerbaijan (DBA) and the Transportation Barge STB -1. The offshore
    activities will also involve Anchor Handler Tugs and support vessels
    that will be leased from the Khazardanizneftdonanmasi (KMNF) fleet.

    The construction of the C&WP jacket started at the BDJF fabrication yard
    in February 2003 and was completed in July 2004. The jacket was built by
    BOS Shelf as a joint venture with SOCAR. The construction contractor has
    used ten main local subcontractors. Some 600 (total local workforce on
    jackets is 1550) local Azerbaijan citizens including subcontractors (90%
    of the total labour-force) were involved in the jacket construction
    activities, which expended in excess of two million manhours.

    Since the beginning of the project a major training programme has been
    provided for the national staff. Most of the local staff have been
    successfully trained and re-trained in various disciplines, with Health,
    Safety and Environment (HSE) set as our priority training area. The
    jacket site has currently achieved 1.6 million manhours without a single
    Day Away From Work Case (DAFWC).

    The Central Azeri C&WP will be bridge-linked to CA PDQ and will be
    responsible for providing all the gas and water injection to the Azeri
    field. A maximum of ten gas injection wells, 12 water injection wells
    and two cutting injection wells will be drilled on the Azeri field and
    the platform will have a final gas injection capacity of 1050 million
    cfd and water injection capacity of 900,000 bpd.

    The ACG Project targets the development of the Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli
    contract area. The remaining part of the ACG field, with estimated
    recoverable reserves of 5.4 billion barrels of oil, will be developed in
    three phases, the two sanctioned phases being Central Azeri, West & East
    Azeri, which require four offshore facilities, a major terminal
    expansion at Sangachal near Baku and over 600 km of subsea pipelines.
    The third phase is expected to be sanctioned in the third quarter of
    2004.

    Central Azeri targets the development of the central area of the Azeri
    field. Central Azeri comprises a 48-slot production, drilling and
    quarters (PDQ) platform, a 30" oil pipeline and a 28" gas pipeline from
    CA to the Sangachal Terminal, expansion of the existing onshore terminal
    in Sangachal, a gas compression and water injection platform (C&WP)
    which will be will be bridge-linked to CA. Construction activities for
    Central Azeri are now over 97% complete and remain on schedule to
    achieve First Oil production in the first quarter of 2005.

    Development of the West and East areas of the Azeri field, in
    conjunction with Central Azeri will complete the Azeri field
    development. West and East Azeri facilities will be integrated with
    Central Azeri facilities to create an Azeri offshore and onshore
    development complex. West and East Azeri facilities comprise two 48-slot
    production, drilling and quarters platforms, an additional 30" oil
    pipeline to the Sangachal Terminal, expansion of the existing onshore
    terminal at Sangachal, and expansion of the Central Azeri gas
    compression and water injection platform.

    The start of first oil production from the West Azeri and East Azeri
    platforms in the second quarter of 2006 and the first quarter of 2007
    respectively will add production of more than 20 million tonnes per year
    (420 thousand barrels per day).

    West and East Azeri field reserves expected to be produced during the
    PSA period are 210 million tonnes (1.6 billion barrels). To achieve this
    production up to 96 additional production, water injection and gas
    injection wells will be drilled followed by approximately 113 additional
    sidetrack wells through the life of the Azeri field.

    The project will bring significant benefits to Azerbaijan including
    enormous long-term oil revenues, upgraded infrastructure for use on
    potential future projects, increased involvement of local supply of
    materials and services, significant employment opportunities, and
    substantial investment in the communities ($4.7 million which will be
    spent by 2007).


    4.5. EXPERTS TALKING ON CASPIAN ECOLOGY DRAFT PROGRAMS

    Source: State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan, AzerTag,
    August 7, 2004

    Meetings with head of the EU expert group on Sustainable Management of
    Caspian Fishery K. Mathews and head of the Caspian Ecology Program H.
    Gafarzadeh (Iran) took place in the Fishery Committee of Kazakhstan
    Agriculture Ministry within implementation of the Caspian ecology
    Program.

    Such issues as regional fishery management, admissible catch volume
    definition methodology, technical interaction and funding of projects
    were discussed.

    The projects are supposed to cover five Caspian states - Azerbaijan,
    Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia and Turkmenistan.

    As part of execution of the Program an office will be opened in Astana.
    The total sum of the Ecology Program projects amounts to 6.8 million
    Euros.


    4.6. DRINKING WATER SUPPLY TO BE IMPROVED IN BALAKAN PROVINCE

    Source: State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan, AzerTag,
    August 7, 2004

    Construction of the new water-drainage system is approaching the end in
    Balakan.

    Implementation of the new project under financial support of the
    European Bank for Reconstruction and Development will completely solve
    water problems in the region.

    ˆ 84 thousand has already been transferred to the account of the Agency
    for recovery and reconstruction of the territories released from the
    occupation, AzerTAj correspondent was told at Balakan water-sewer system
    and constructions area. Agency prepared design estimates for
    construction of water-drainage system. A construction tender winner will
    be announced in August 10. The construction is expected to start in
    early September.


    4.7. AZERI PROJECT COST 4 BLN. DOLLARS

    Source: State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Armenia, August 10,
    2004

    4 billion US dollars has been spent on the Azeri offshore oil project in
    Azerbaijan up to date, said Neil Shaw, BP-Azerbaijan's vice president.
    Mr.Shaw told reporters that at the Sangachal terminal construction at
    the central Azeri field - part of the Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli (ACG)
    project - is 97% complete, the West Azeri rig 63%, the East Azeri rig
    31% and the gas compressor and water injection platform 77% complete.

    Supports for the compressor and water injection terminal will be in
    place during September, when the Central Azeri rig will be floated out
    to sea. Azeri should yield its first oil between the end of December
    2004 and the end of January 2005, Shaw said.

    Other BP-Azerbaijan officials said construction of the gas compressor
    and water injection platform's upper modules was 55% complete. The
    platform will be fitted with four of the world's most powerful water
    pumps.

    A 30-inch oil pipeline and a 28-inch gas pipeline that will link Central
    Azeri and the Sangachal terminal have been tested. Half of a fiber optic
    cable between the platform and the terminal is in place.

    A first reservoir, capacity 880,000 barrels, has been built. A third
    reservoir is 75%-complete. All of them will be ready by the end of this
    year.

    Phase-1 of the ACG project involves building a rig with 48 wells in the
    central section of the Azeri field. During the phase, Azeri will yield
    1.425 billion standard barrels of oil or about 200 million tonnes.
    Production will peak at 18.7 million tonnes a year or 375,000 barrels a
    day.

    Phase-2 involves building two 48-well platforms in the eastern and
    western sections of the Azeri field. Production is due to begin at West
    Azeri in the second quarter of 2006 and at East Azeri in the first
    quarter of 2007. More than 20 million tonnes a year or 420,000 barrels a
    day will be produced from the two platforms. The phase should yield a
    total of 210 million tonnes of 1.6 billion barrels of oil.



    5. NEWS FROM ARMENIA
    5.1. ECOLOGY SUPERVISORS DRESSED IN UNIFORMS AND ARMED

    Source: AZG Daily #137, July 24, 2004

    The law project of "Ecology supervision" was presented to the Minister
    of Environment of Azerbaijan Vartan Aivazian on July 21, 2004. The
    Minister said that the ecology supervision employees will have their
    special uniforms and will have license for carrying guns but they shall
    not turn into ecological police. Only the supervisors will be armed, as
    those employees working in the labs or the analytical center have no
    need of a gun.

    Concerning the illegal woodcutting, Minister said that the person
    involved in this crime is being fined. The size of the fine depends on
    the market price of the wood; for instance, if it costs 5000 AMD then
    the fine will be 8000 AMD instead of 6600 as it used to be. Vartan
    Aivazian said that the wood is not being confiscated in this case.
    Meanwhile he informed that recently confiscated 30 tones of illegally
    caught fish were distributed to the orphanages. Thus, the law is
    enforced differently in case of fish and in case of wood.


    5.2. STOP FOR GREEN: ACTIVISTS CALL ON AUTHORITIES TO HALT ECOLOGICAL
    DESTRUCTION IN YEREVAN

    Source: ArmeniaNow, August 6, 2004

    A group of environmental activists is taking steps to alert the highest
    authorities in Armenia to what they see as a serious and dangerous
    hazard concerning "green areas" in Yerevan.

    The group has prepared a letter to the Government of Armenia in which it
    brings to attention the destruction of several major Yerevan parks that
    have been denuded to make space for new cafes.

    The letter calls upon the Government of Armenia and the Municipality of
    Yerevan to stop all "legal" and "illegal" construction in the areas of
    the Tsitsernakaberd, Circular Park, Hrazdan Canyon, Freedom Square and
    some central streets in the capital.

    In 1998, there were 197 cafes in the center of Yerevan, serving a
    population of about 75,000. As of 2002 the number had increased to 415
    and has risen even higher in the past two years. (ArmeniaNow asks city
    officials for the latest number and was told a written request must be
    submitted.)

    Ecologists argue that the construction of cafes robs the city of its
    aesthetic value and leaves citizens with no place for solitude.

    The activists are demanding that officials (many of the cafes are owned
    by various ministers and government authorities) who are responsible for
    the destruction of green areas be held to account. And they say they are
    ready to bring a lawsuit against the President of Armenia, the Prime
    Minister, present and former mayors, city architects and others, if
    appropriate action is not taken.

    But even the activists aren't optimistic about Yerevan's future
    ecological situation.

    "It is a hopeless situation," says Armen Dovlatyan, president of
    Armenian Ecological Benevolent Union. "If the destruction of green zones
    will continue, soon Yerevan will become a desert zone".

    According to Mr. Dovlatyan, beginning from the 1990s Yerevan lost more
    than 1,500 hectares from 2,000 hectares of its green zone.

    "Everybody tries to blame war and energetic problems in 1990-1995, when
    people in order do get warmth in winter cut trees," he says. "But
    according to our investigations, the cut area was only 430 hectares in
    1990-1995, and between 1995-2003, 1,000 hectares of green zone."

    Today in Yerevan, ecologists claim, there are less than 500 hectares of
    green zone left, due, they say, which are also endangered due to
    political wrongdoing and ignorance.

    Mr. Dovlatyan says that every official of Yerevan guarantees that there
    will be no permission to build new buildings and cafes. But the promises
    are broken and green zones are destroyed especially by the officials and
    their relatives, in order to build personal homes or entertainment
    businesses.

    ArmeniaNow asked Former Yerevan City Chief Architect, Narek Sargsyan
    (under whose administration most cafes were built) if he was aware of a
    potential lawsuit against the city. "Yes, when you build something in
    this town, at the end you will be sued," Sargsyan said.

    The Chief Architect would not say whether he had issued permits for the
    structures that the ecologists say are illegal.

    "For the last few years the summer heat became awful, which is also the
    result of the green zones destruction. There is no air for breathing,"
    says the leader of the Armenian Aryan Community Armen Avetisyan, who
    also joined the ecologists. "This is a cultural-historical massacre,
    which needs to be stopped."

    Mr. Dovlatyan says, that besides the heat, the destruction of the green
    zones in the capital became the reason for strong winds as well as the
    rise of heart and respiratory diseases.

    "I can give you an example from Nork Forest, next to which I live," says
    National Assembly deputy Arshak Sadoyan, citing a green area scheduled
    to be reduced by 80 percent for construction. "When I look at the forest
    it hurts me and I start to think: 'What are we doing to the future of
    our children? Yerevan has to have lungs, but we have already lost those
    lungs. And by this action (the letter) we will try to protect our
    citizens and give back lungs to Yerevan."

    The coalition of ecologists is starting a signature campaign to collect
    endorsements by citizens who share their concern. Since it started a
    week ago, some 2,500 signatures have been collected. The group hopes to
    gather 10,000 signatures, and, if demands are not met, plans to sue the
    Government.



    6 NGO NEWS
    6.1. DUMPSITE IN BAKURIANI

    Movement towards solution of Bakuriani waste management problems was
    launched a couple of months ago. First step that was taken in the
    framework of this campaign was arrangement of the meeting with the local
    citizens, where the needs and the concerns of the population were
    identified. On May 25, 2004 with the initiative of the CENN Bakuriani
    Public Environmental and Information Center (PEIC) and with the support
    of different non-governmental organizations from Tbilisi the
    environmental campaign "Rest from Waste" has been carried out in
    Bakuriani. Local population took active part in the action. The group of
    activists from the local population continued arranging meetings and
    roundtables systematically at the CENN Bakuriani PEIC after the
    above-mentioned action. Local government was imposed to purchase the
    special truck for waste collection.

    However, the problem of the dumpsite still remains unsettled. There are
    a couple of illegal sites in Bakuriani, which cause serious problems for
    the sanitary state of the village.

    On August 6, 2004, the meeting on waste management problems has been
    arranged at the CENN Bakuriani PEIC. The specialists from The Ministry
    of Environmental Protection and Natural Resources of Georgia, regional
    department of Forest Management, local government, businessmen and the
    representatives of the civil society participated in the round table.
    The meeting mainly focused on solution of current waste management
    problems in Bakuriani through arrangement of a dumpsite. The
    participants agreed upon launching joint efforts towards this direction.

    Prepared by Bakuriani Public Environmental; and Information Center
    (PEIC) of Bakuriani



    7. INTERNATIONAL NEWS
    71. NEW NUCLEAR-TEST-MONITORING STATION ESTABLISHED IN KAZAKHSTAN

    Source: RFE/RL Newsline, August 6, 2004

    Officials of the National Nuclear Center of Kazakhstan announced on
    August 4, 2004 that its new Akbulak nuclear-test-monitoring facility
    will be fully operational in the coming days, "Kazakhstan Today"
    reported. The new facility, located 200 kilometers south of Astana, is a
    joint project by Kazakhstan and the U.S. Air Force and will conduct
    extensive monitoring of underground nuclear tests.


    72. NEW BIOMEDICAL CENTER ON GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS TO OPEN IN
    KYRGYZSTAN

    Source: RFE/RL Newsline, August 6, 2004

    Kyrgyz officials announced plans on 5 August to open the country's first
    scientific center on genetically modified products, according to
    Kyrgyzinfo. The biomedical center is a joint effort with the Russian
    Academy of Sciences and is to "control and create" a number of
    genetically modified agricultural products.


    7.3. RUSSIA NEGOTIATING TRANSPORT OF SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL FROM UZBEKISTAN

    Source: RFE/RL Newsline, August 6, 2004

    Officials of the Russian Federal Atomic Energy Agency confirmed on
    August 5, 2004 that they are currently negotiating with Uzbek
    authorities to import spent nuclear fuel from a scientific reactor in
    Uzbekistan, Interfax reported. The negotiations are to include two
    separate contracts -- one for the transportation and another for the
    handling and processing of the spent fuel -- and are expected to be
    concluded in 2005. The deal is described as a "pilot project" for the
    two countries that "may run [into] hundreds of thousands of dollars,"
    according to an agency official quoted by Interfax. The removal of spent
    nuclear fuel from Uzbekistan is seen as an important measure to prevent
    proliferation.


    7.4. WORLD BANK CHALLENGED: ARE THE POOR REALLY HELPED?

    Source: EIR-NOW!, July 28, 2004

    Wealthy nations and international organizations, including the World
    Bank, spend more than $55 billion annually to better the lot of the
    world's 2.7 billion poor people. Yet they have scant evidence that the
    myriad projects they finance have made any real difference, many
    economists say.

    That important fact has left some critics of the World Bank, the largest
    financier of antipoverty programs in developing countries, dissatisfied,
    and they have begun throwing down an essential challenge. It is not
    enough, they say, just to measure how many miles of roads are built,
    schools constructed or microcredit loans provided. You must also measure
    whether those investments actually help poor people live longer, more
    prosperous lives.

    It is a common-sense approach that is harder than it sounds, just like
    the question it seeks to answer: Does aid really work?

    A small band of development economists, who a year ago founded the
    Poverty Action Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, have
    become influential advocates for randomized evaluations as the best way
    to answer that question. Such trials, generally regarded as the gold
    standard in social policy research, involve randomly assigning people
    eligible for an antipoverty program to get the help or not, then
    comparing outcomes to see whether those who got the help fared better
    than those who did not.

    It is the same approach that has helped drug companies figure out what
    medicines are effective and Americans decide how best to reform welfare.
    Advocates for rigorous evaluations hope to make aid more effective, not
    by directing money to particular countries, but by spending it on
    programs proven to work.

    The Poverty Action Lab scholars have made startling discoveries in their
    own randomized evaluations.

    Adding an extra teacher to classrooms in rural India did not improve
    children's test scores. But hiring high-school graduates who were paid
    only $10 to $15 a month to give remedial tutoring to groups of lagging
    students in a Bombay slum markedly improved reading and math skills.

    A series of education experiments in Kenya found that providing poor
    students with free uniforms or a simple porridge breakfast substantially
    increased attendance. But giving them drugs to treat the intestinal
    worms that infect more than a quarter of the world's population was more
    cost effective, with a price tag of only $3.50 for each extra year of
    schooling achieved. Healthier children are more likely to go to school.
    "You can't answer the general question: Doesaid work?'' said Esther
    Duflo, an economist and co-founder of the Poverty Action Lab. "You have
    to go project by project and accumulate the evidence.''

    The World Bank, a lumbering giant that employs more than 1,200 Ph.D.'s,
    is beginning to listen to critics like her. This summer, it is
    organizing large-scale impact evaluations, including randomized trials,
    of programs to upgrade slums, improve the performance of schools and
    keep children healthy and in class. The programs will be tested in
    dozens of countries.

    FranÃois Bourguignon, the bank's chief economist, said he hoped this new
    effort would help the bank, other donors and developing countries "learn
    what does and does not work."

    Rigorous impact evaluations should become part of the bank's culture, he
    said.

    That will require deep change. A recent in-house review of bank projects
    during the past four to five years found that only 2 percent had been
    properly evaluated for whether they made a difference, according to Mr.
    Bourguignon.

    When Lant Pritchett, an economist who has spent a dozen years at the
    bank, pondered why there was so little good evidence on the impact of
    projects it financed, a tune from an old game show spoof that his Mom
    used to sing popped into his head: "It pays to be ignorant, to be dumb,
    to be dense . . ."

    Bank economists have recently produced assessments of huge development
    initiatives that acknowledge weaknesses in the evidence.

    A critical review of the bank's $7 billion portfolio of programs that
    involve local communities in their design and management concluded
    recently that "there are, unfortunately, a dearth of well-designed
    evaluations of such projects."

    Another review of a $1.3 billion initiative in India found similar
    problems. Bank economists in New Delhi examined more than 200 studies of
    projects in India that ranged from teacher training to school
    construction, enrollment drives to textbook revision.

    They concluded that none of the studies were rigorous enough to measure
    whether the initiatives made a difference, except for one that found it
    increased enrollment by a disappointing 1.3 percent. "The World Bank
    spent more than a billion dollars without knowing why they were doing
    what they were doing - that's the tragedy,'' said Abhijit Banerjee, an
    M.I.T. economics professor and co-founder of the Poverty Action Lab.

    But even as aid agencies lagged in conducting stringent evaluations,
    Professors Banerjee and Duflo at M.I.T., Michael Kremer at Harvard and
    other economists associated with the lab have been conducting randomized
    trials of antipoverty programs in India, Kenya, South Africa, Peru and
    the Philippines.

    Even they acknowledge that random evaluations are not a panacea. For
    example, a program that works in Asia may not work in Africa. Still,
    they say, the trials offer the best evidence.

    "This rigorous testing has made a huge difference in medicine and has
    improved human welfare due to better drugs,'' said Professor Kremer. "If
    we could use randomized evaluations to really find out what works,
    foreign aid donors could implement better health and education policies
    and so could developing countries.''

    Mr. Pritchett, a veteran bank economist, tried to explain why rigorous
    evaluations were such a rarity in the culture of the bank. Its highly
    trained, well-meaning professionals too often think they know the
    solutions. "They have too little doubt,'' he said.

    They also worry that modest, proven gains for the poor will lose out to
    inflated, unproven claims for, say, tax cuts to the rich or a new
    weapons system - a concern he shares. "You wan to know what works and
    what doesn't, but until you subject the full range of government
    spending to the same discipline, why are you disadvantaging things for
    poor people?'' he asked.

    But Professor Banerjee is optimistic that reliable evaluations will give
    advocates ammunition to lobby for increased foreign aid.

    He pointed to the success of a rigorously studied Mexican program that
    paid poor mothers a small sum if they kept their children in school and
    got them immunized. The model has spread across Latin America in large
    measure because a large randomized trial, published in 2001, showed that
    the children who participated were healthier and stayed in school
    longer.

    "In the development business,'' he said, "it would be really good to get
    away from the need to have people promising miracles.''



    8. NEW PUBLICATIONS
    8.1. LITTLE GREEN DATA BOOK 2004

    Source: Eco-Accordance, July 29, 2004

    The WB has published the Little Green Data Book 2004. This pocket size
    publication summarizes basic data on the environment in the world, in
    separate regions and countries.

    In the guidebook you could find information on the key indicators in the
    following fields: agriculture, forestry, biodiversity, energy,
    discharges and pollution, water and sanitary. The whole page is
    dedicated to each country.

    The guidebook gives you opportunity to carry out the comparison between
    countries and regions.

    The Little Green Data Book 2004 in English language is available on the
    following address: http://www.worldbank.org/sustainabledevelopment

    If you would like to receive a copy by mail, please send your request to
    [email protected]



    9. CALENDAR (INTERNATIONAL)
    9.1. INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES - INTERNATIONAL YOUTH CONFERENCE

    We invite you to participate in the activities of the International
    Youth Conference that will take place on the 11-14 October 2004,
    Yerevan.

    The conference will be convened according to the following directions:
    o Information technologies in the sociological science
    o Information technologies in the field of the biological medicine
    o Information technologies in the technical sciences

    The conference working languages are Armenian, Russian, and English.
    Students (bachelors, masters), post-graduate students, candidates, and
    researchers up to the age of 35 can participate in the conference.

    The Section of Biological Medicine of the conference will take place in
    the Yerevan State Medical University after M. Heratsi.

    The conference materials are accepted prior to September 1, 2004.

    The conference materials must be submitted in Armenian, Russian, or
    English, volume of 3-4 pages, with MS Word text format, according to the
    following criterion: Working field is 11.5x17.5 cm (for example, for A4
    (21.0x29.7) paper size Top-6cm, Bottom-6.5cm, Left-5cm, Right-4.5cm),
    line spacing-1.2, font- Arial Armenian, Times New Roman, size-10.

    Report materials can only be considered by e-mail delivery to the
    following e-mail addresses:
    o Information Technologies in the Sociological Science [email protected]
    o Information technologies in the field of the biological medicine
    [email protected]
    o Information technologies in the technical sciences [email protected]

    Lana Hakobyan
    Office manager
    Bioecomed NGO
    7 Hasratyan St., 375014, Yerevan RA
    Tel/Fax: + 374 1 282061


    9.2. NINTH EUROPEAN PH.D WORKSHOP ON INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE POLICY

    October 15-16, 2004

    The Ninth European Ph.D workshop on International Climate Policy will be
    held a the university of Tuscia, hosted by the Department of Forest
    Science and Resources on October 15-16, 2004 in Viterbo, Italy.

    The workshop is open for Ph.D students and researchers from all
    disciplines working on different aspects of International Climate
    Policy. It offers a forum to present preliminary Ph.D research ideas and
    results and discus them with other students and researchers working in
    the field. The workshop will be held in English. The is no workshop fee.
    How ever we may ask for you financial participation in to the drinks and
    snacks that will be provided during the two days. We could not offer
    funding to cover travel costs accommodation.

    Further information id available on the
    http://www.ku-eichstaett.de/Fakultaeten/WWF/Lehrstuehle/VWF/icp/

    Registration deadline September 10, 2004.


    ****************************************** *********************************

    Subscribing Information

    This CENN lists are created to maintain e-mail discussions of Caucasus
    Environmental NGO Network members. By sending the letter on address
    [email protected], all subscribers will receive it.

    To subscribe or unsubscribe from CENN mailing list service, please send
    an email message to [email protected] and places the subscribe or
    unsubscribe command as the first line of the message body. For example,
    if a mailing list called CENN, one would subscribe or unsubscribe by
    placing the value: SUBSCRIBE CENN or UNSUBSCRIBE CENN as the first line
    of the message body. The message subject is irrelevant and can be left
    blank. For more information, please visit CENN web page at: www.cenn.org

    CENN, on behalf of the Caucasus Environmental NGOs, would like to
    express gratitude to the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
    (SDC) for provision of financial support for regional environmental
    networking program.

    For more information about the program, please visit CENN web-page:
    www.cenn.org
    ************************************************** *************************

    Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)

    E-mail: [email protected]
    URL: www.cenn.org

    ************************************************** *************************

    Editorial policy: CENN both solicits and accepts submissions for
    environmental information to the Caucasus Environmental News Bulletin.
    Although, CENN retains the right to edit all materials both for content
    and length. The information provided for the Bulletin does not
    necessarily represent the opinion of CENN and SDC.
    ************************************************** *************************
Working...
X