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  • Promises still power Georgia's electricity system

    EurasiaNet Organization
    Jan 24 2005

    PROMISES STILL POWER GEORGIA'S ELECTRICITY SYSTEM
    Molly Corso 1/24/05
    A EusrasiaNet Photo Essay

    This New Year's, the television was on at Imzari Chartishvili's home
    in the West Georgian village of Lesa. Although no one watched it most
    of the time, its presence was a comfort. The broadcasts came as a
    special holiday gift from the Georgian government: a 24-hour supply
    of electricity.

    After years of inadequate or non-existent maintenance following the
    breakup of the Soviet Union, the problems of Georgia's electricity
    system are legion - and legendary. But with expectations of a cash
    windfall from the current privatization campaign, the government is
    promising that the situation might - after 13 years - finally change.


    A December 23 statement by Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania set the tone.
    In it, Zhvania pledged that $70 million out of an expected $200
    million from state property sales would go to "securing electricity
    supplies" by autumn 2005. Energy Minister Nika Gilauri later went one
    step further and even named a concrete date: October 1, 2005.

    But whether that amount will be enough to turn the lights on is open
    to debate. Dana Kenney, senior energy advisor at the US Agency for
    International Development's Office of Energy and Environment in
    Tbilisi, stated that the figures touted by the government will fall
    far short of solving Georgia's energy woes. Pervasive corruption and
    problems with bill collection also plague the energy sector. Though
    breaking the system up into separate generation, transmission and
    distribution units helped curtail some of the corruption, Kenney
    said, those problems still linger on. "Money has to flow through the
    system," she commented.

    How the government plans to keep that money flowing, however, is
    unknown. For now, in addition to the privatization revenue, emphasis
    is being placed on outside assistance. At a June 2004 donors'
    conference in Brussels, Georgia submitted requests for $82 million in
    assistance for the energy sector, an amount second only to "budget
    support," the online news service Civil Georgia reported. The
    government also expects to use funds from the US-run Millennium
    Challenge Program for refurbishing small hydropower stations and
    monies from the German bank KWF to revamp the regions' electricity
    supplies, Gilauri told a January 6 press conference, the Prime News
    Agency reported. The exact amount of these funds has not been
    disclosed.

    A comprehensive government plan to revamp the energy system has also
    been announced, but not made public. The Energy Ministry did not
    respond to EurasiaNet requests for information on the plan in time
    for this article.

    Meanwhile, despite the government's promises, public exasperation
    with Georgia's energy crisis shows no sign of abating. In December
    2004, some 600 protestors in Kutaisi, Georgia's second largest city,
    took to the streets with placards bearing a simple message: "Give us
    light." They were joined by 200 demonstrators in the nearby town of
    Zestafoni.

    At the time, local officials appeared divided on how to respond to
    the crisis. While Giga Shushania, deputy governor for Imereti
    province, home to Kutaisi, took aim at power distributors for leaving
    the city "blacked out for the past few months" and without adequate
    drinking water, Deputy Governor Gia Tevdoradze took issue with
    protestors, asking "You haven't had electricity for 13 years [so] why
    do you remember it?" the daily 24 Hours reported.

    Georgia produces mainly hydropower, which provides enough energy for
    the spring, summer and autumn when water levels are high. When water
    levels fall in the winter, imports - from Russia, Armenia, Turkey and
    Azerbaijan - cover the gap. Energy Efficiency Center Georgia, a
    renewable energy consultancy sponsored by the European Union,
    estimates that Georgia's domestic oil, gas and coal supplies can
    cover only 20 percent of annual demand.

    These days, the degree of the problem is not always felt in Tbilisi,
    where the situation has drastically improved over the past few years.
    But the capital still feels the pain of aging transmission lines and
    equipment. Periodic blackouts hit the capital in October, November
    and December; largely the result of faulty transmission lines, in
    addition to the general disrepair of the entire sector.

    But while Tbilisi may go several days without reliable electricity,
    several weeks or even months is more the norm in the regions, home to
    approximately 68 percent of Georgia's population of 4.7 million.

    Bill payment is one frequent explanation cited by both the government
    and energy sector experts for the electricity system's woes.
    According to statistics from the Energy Efficiency Center, roughly 60
    percent of Tbilisi residents pay their electricity and gas bills. In
    the regions, though, that number drops to around 30 percent.

    "There is a difference between [electricity company] management in
    Tbilisi and the rest of the country," said George Abulashvili,
    director of Energy Efficiency Center Georgia, "The customers in
    Tbilisi are paying for the energy."

    But in the western province of Guria, home to Imzari Chartishvili,
    paying or not paying electricity bills makes little difference. While
    electricity company officials have announced that they will provide
    electricity for a few hours per day only to account holders who have
    paid their monthly bills (roughly nine lari, or about $5), recently,
    even those residents who had paid their bills have still been left
    sitting in the dark for days on end, villagers in Lesa say. What
    power there is comes for a few hours at night only.

    Ongoing corruption at each stage of the electricity system -
    generation, transmission and distribution - plays a large role in
    hampering bill payment, commented USAID's Dana Kenney. "People don't
    want to pay because they don't know where the money is going," she
    said.

    So far, under Saakashvili's relatively free-form anti-corruption
    campaign, few details have been provided on how the government plans
    to tackle that problem.

    Meanwhile, outside interest in Georgia's energy industry continues
    apace. In December, plans were announced by Canargo Energy
    Corporation, a Channel Islands-based oil and gas production company,
    for a $57 million oil drilling project in the Samgori and Ninotsminda
    fields. Georgia's Vartsikhe Hydro Power Plant was recently sold
    together with Chiaturmanganumi, a manganese mining enterprise, to the
    Russian company EvrAz Holding and the Austrian-Georgian company
    DCM-Ferro for $132 million. Talks have also reportedly started about
    selling the country's gas distribution stations, a heating plant and
    a backline pipeline, to Russian energy giant Gazprom, according to
    Rustavi-2 television - deals that would require amendments to
    existing legislation.

    But whether or not this show of investor interest will make a
    difference for ordinary Georgians remains unknown. So far, the lack
    of workable solutions has only slowed Georgia's economic recovery
    still further, observers say. The country's per capita income and
    economic growth rates lag far behind those of neighbors Armenia and
    Azerbaijan.

    "Energy is everything for our people . . .They can't do anything
    without energy," said Manana Dadiani, head of the EEC's Renewable
    Energy Department. "Giving them energy gives them the possibility to
    do something."


    Editor's Note: Molly Corso is a freelance journalist and photographer
    based in Georgia.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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