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Armenia's inert gas service

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  • Armenia's inert gas service

    IWPR - Institute for War & Peace Reporting
    March 16 2005

    ARMENIA'S INERT GAS SERVICE

    Shoddy installation and lack of government oversight means using gas
    at home is a risky business.

    By Lana Mshetsian and Tigran Mirzoyan in Yerevan

    Energy-starved Armenia is turning to gas, but there are now concerns
    that the uncontrolled conversion process is costing lives and causing
    chaos.

    This winter alone, around 30 people died because of poisoning, fires
    and explosions caused by defects in the domestic gas system.

    Gevork Danielian, Armenia`s deputy general prosecutor, told IWPR that
    figures held by his office show that the number of gas-related
    accidents has been growing over the past five years as the country
    converts to the use of natural gas. The prosecutor's office is now
    investigating several such cases.

    Karine Stepanian, a Yerevan housewife, complained that, "The
    long-awaited gas installation has brought a load of problems: there's
    a constant smell of gas in the house, yet the gas service people
    insist it's all OK. If, God forbid, there is some kind of accident, I
    bet no one will take responsibility."

    As complaints mounted about the government's failure to regulate the
    changeover, President Robert Kocharian announced he would take
    action. Admitted recently that the rapid pace of the switch to gas use
    had caught officials, he said, "I have been forced to intervene
    personally and put things in order, using extreme measures." It is not
    yet clear what those measures will entail.

    The president also said much of the blame should be apportioned to
    careless members of the public, and suggested there was an urgent need
    for education to tell people how to use gas safely.

    Armenia has suffered a severe energy crisis since 1990-91 when the
    Nagorny Karabakh conflict resulted in the closure of the border with
    Azerbaijan, the traditional route source of were closed off. There was
    little or no gas available until 1997 and many people cooked on
    primitive stoves.

    The controversial re-opening of the Metsamor nuclear power station in
    1995 improved the electricity supply, and currently covers 40 per cent
    of the country's energy needs. (See CRS 271, January 26, 2005,
    "Armenian Atomic Dilemma.")

    The ArmRosGazprom firm is now re-introducing gas as an energy source,
    following the renovation of the decrepit gas network. Company Shushan
    Sardarian, a press secretary of the company predicts that by 2007 the
    company will have more than half a million customers, even more than
    Armenia had in the Soviet period. ArmRosGazprom is 45 per cent owned
    by the Armenian government, 45 per cent by the Russian gas giant
    Gazprom and 10 per cent by another Russian company, Itera.

    ArmRosGazprom is only laying pipelines as far as buildings as a whole,
    and other companies are doing the connection to individual
    apartments. Experts worry that the connection process is being carried
    out in a hurry, without the proper care or coordination. Mkrtich
    Abelian, an engineer, told IWPR, "There is no programme for tackling
    the problems associated with gas installation in a systematic and
    organised manner. There is no scheme that sets out how the gas should
    go from the supplier to the consumer."

    Ordinary citizens have little confidence in the installation work.
    "The dozens of organisations that install gas supplies within
    buildings do the same job for varying prices," said Ashot Mkrtchian, a
    40-year-old teacher. "Each of them works out its own routing for the
    pipes."

    Moreover, because the pipes are being laid above ground, many
    buildings are now disfigured by webs of metal tubing. This, according
    to architect Artsvin Grigorian, is "the most flagrant breach of
    building regulations and practices".

    Officials from ArmRosGazprom say the problem is being corrected.
    "Even if there have been breaches of construction practice in some
    places, ArmRosGazprom will soon switch to using polyethylene pipes
    which will be laid underground," said Sardarian.

    In the meantime, the rate of accidents almost doubled in 2004.
    According to Nikolai Grigorian, press secretary at the government
    department for emergency situations, 29 cases of gas poisoning were
    recorded in just the first two months of 2005.

    Grigorian urged consumers not to use unauthorised gas stoves to heat
    their homes because of the grave risk they pose. "The market is full
    of Turkish and Iranian-produced heaters that don't even have smoke
    flues", he said.

    In neighbouring Georgia, Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania died in January
    apparently as a result of poisoning from a faulty Iranian gas stove.

    Sardarian said consumers are responsible for many of the accidents
    because they use cheap, home-fitted appliances without ventilation,
    all in the name of saving money.

    However, Danielian of the prosecutor's office says there is a more
    fundamental problem of governmental oversight which is now being
    looked into.

    "In this sector, as in any other, there should be state officials
    responsible for monitoring the situation," he said. "But it is not an
    easy matter to work out exactly who is responsible for safety in the
    sector, as the state energy watchdog was abolished in 2000 without a
    replacement body being put in place.... A state body responsible for
    coordinated supervision of the gas sector is essential."

    Twenty four criminal investigations into gas-related accidents are now
    under way. No prosecutions have yet been started.

    "No state official will shoulder responsibility for the dozens of
    deaths," said teacher Mkrtchian. "But that doesn't mean they are not
    to blame. The government is passing the buck. There is nothing
    surprising about that - it happens all the time here. We ordinary
    citizens are the ones who suffer."

    The World Bank is now taking an interest in the issue. Gevork
    Sarkisian, director of the bank's programme for heating provision in
    Armenia, said that following talks with the government, his bank has
    allocated one million US dollars to assist with safety measures in
    Yerevan.

    "The main aim of the programme is to test - ahead of implementation -
    the most effective and least environmentally harmful methods of
    heating multi-storey buildings," said Sarkisian.

    Lana Mshetsian and Tigran Mirzoian are freelance journalists in
    Yerevan.
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