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Russian Electricity Monopoly Gets Right to Manage grid for 99 years

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  • Russian Electricity Monopoly Gets Right to Manage grid for 99 years

    Russian electricity monopoly gets right to manage Armenian grid for 99 years

    AP Worldstream; Jul 22, 2005


    Russia's electricity monopoly Unified Energy Systems has acquired the
    right to manage and receive profits from Armenia's national grid
    company for the next 99 years, UES said Friday.

    The giant Russian utility paid US$73 million (Aâ=82¬60 million) in the
    deal, which was signed June 23, making UES the effective owner of the
    company _ but sidestepping the need to seek approval from the Armenian
    government as in the case of an outright purchase.

    A spokeswoman for UES said Friday that the company would not comment
    on the structure of the deal. She did not rule out, however, that the
    company could acquire shares in the grid company _ Electricity
    Networks of Armenia _ in the future.

    UES had reported in its 2004 financial statement at the end of June
    that it had paid the US$73 million (Aâ=82¬60 million) to buy the
    company. It said Friday this information was not true and had been
    mistakenly included in the financial statement.

    State-controlled UES, hungry to cement influence in the former Soviet
    republics, has struck several high-profile electricity deals with
    Russia's smaller neighbors.

    In Georgia it controls a chunk of generation and power distribution,
    and has negotiated generator-building deals in Tajikistan, which
    supplies neighbors Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan.

    Mikhail Mantrov, the head of UES' international division Interenergo
    B.V., said Friday in Yerevan that UES also controls 10 percent of the
    former Soviet republic's electricity-generating capacity via the
    Sevano-Razdansky hydroelectric power station.

    British company Midland Resources Holding paid US$37 million
    (Aâ=82¬30.4 million) for Electricity Networks of Armenia in 2002, of
    which US$25 million (Aâ=82¬20.5 million) was earmarked to pay down the
    cash-starved company's debts and overdue wages.
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