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Russia Hushes Up Purchase Of Iran-Armenia Pipeline

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  • Russia Hushes Up Purchase Of Iran-Armenia Pipeline

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep
    April 7 2006

    Russia Hushes Up Purchase Of Iran-Armenia Pipeline


    Russia's state-run Gazprom monopoly has hastily retracted its
    official confirmation of reports about its takeover of a planned
    Armenian-Iranian natural pipeline as part of a controversial
    agreement to temporarily reduce the cost of Russian gas for Armenia.

    In a statement posted on its website on Thursday, Gazprom said it
    will be granted ownership of a major Armenian power plant and the
    first 40-kilometer section of the pipeline currently under
    construction in return for keeping the gas price relatively low until
    the end of 2008.

    The statement was found to have been altered the next day, containing
    no references to the pipeline which is due to go into service this
    November. It now says that Gazprom's Armenian subsidiary,
    ArmRosGazprom (ARG), will take over the gas-fired plant in Hrazdan
    and unspecified `facilities of Armenia's gas sphere.'

    The change of wording seems aimed at sparing the Armenian government
    public embarrassment over its claims that the Russians will get hold
    of the Hrazdan plant only. Still, the edited version of the Gazprom
    statement falls short of explicitly denying the imminent Russian
    takeover of a pipeline that was supposed to reduce Armenia's
    dependence on its ex-Soviet master for energy.

    The Russian energy giant also stood by its claims that its presently
    45 percent share in ARG, which owns Armenia's entire gas
    infrastructure, will be raised to a `qualitative majority.' According
    to the Moscow daily `Kommersant,' the Gazprom stake in the gas
    operator will jump to 82 percent.

    This will constitute an additional handover of Armenian energy assets
    to Moscow which the government in Yerevan prefers not publicize for
    the moment. President Robert Kocharian and other senior officials
    have spoken instead of the short-term benefits of the deal for
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians using Russian gas for heating
    purposes. They will pay 65 drams (14 U.S. cents) per cubic meter of
    the fuel, instead of the planned 90 drams, until January 2009.

    Under the terms of the deal, the Russian side is also obliged to pay
    the Armenian government $60 million in cash and make large-scale
    capital investments in the incomplete Hrazdan facility.

    State-run Russian companies already own Armenia's largest thermal
    power plant, also located in Hrazdan, several hydro-electric stations
    as well as the country's entire electricity distribution network. In
    addition, Russia's Unified Energy Systems utility manages the
    finances of the Metsamor nuclear power plant.

    `The republic's energy sector has been taken under Russian control,'
    `Kommersant' declared on Friday. The paper said that Gazprom will now
    make sure that Iranian gas is not exported to third countries,
    including Georgia, through Armenian territory.
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