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Necessity Mother Of Invention In Gas-Fuelled Armenia

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  • Necessity Mother Of Invention In Gas-Fuelled Armenia

    NECESSITY MOTHER OF INVENTION IN GAS-FUELLED ARMENIA
    By Hasmik Mkrtchian

    Reuters, UK
    Aug. 16, 2006

    YEREVAN (Reuters) - Ex-Soviet state Armenia is blazing a trail in
    the global quest to move to cleaner fuels -- not by choice but out
    of necessity.

    The tiny country of 3 million people in the Caucasus mountains has
    a strong claim to be a world leader in running vehicles on natural
    gas: a fuel that produces fewer harmful greenhouse gases than petrol
    or diesel.

    The transport ministry estimates that between 20 and 30 percent of
    vehicles in Armenia run on gas. That compares to just over 3 percent
    in the Netherlands, a front-runner in gas-powered transport, according
    to the World LP Gas Association.

    Stop one of the creaking, Russian-made taxis plying their trade in
    Armenia's capital, Yerevan, and odds are it will have a gas canister
    strapped into the boot. Battered buses have rows of red canisters
    fastened onto their roof-racks.

    In countries like the Netherlands, switching from petrol to gas is
    seen as a green option.

    In landlocked Armenia, it is not concerns over climate change or
    global warming that are driving growth in gas-powered vehicles.

    Instead, it is harsh necessity -- and an unresolved war with
    Azerbaijan, its neighbor to the east.

    "In our taxi firm, we have 30 cars and all of them run on gas," said
    45-year-old Seryozha Harutunian, driver of a gas-powered Volga sedan.

    "And there are gas refueling stations on every corner in Yerevan,"
    he said.

    Richer countries offer tax incentives to make gas for use in vehicles
    -- known as autogas -- more attractive to motorists than traditional
    fuels. But they have had only limited success.

    "They are niche markets," said Yvon Sellier, director of business
    practices with the World LP Gas Association, a Geneva-based lobby
    group. "(Gas is a) small proportion of the fuel consumed by vehicles."

    NECESSITY MOTHER OF INVENTION

    Crude oil and oil products used to be brought into Armenia by
    rail direct from Azerbaijan's oil fields and refineries. Since a
    territorial conflict between the two neighbors in the early 1990s,
    the border has been closed.

    Now, oil and oil products -- Armenian officials do not say where they
    come from -- have to be shipped in through Armenia's other neighbor
    Georgia, a long and tortuous journey through the Caucasus mountains.

    That creates an extra cost on top of the already high price for fuel
    on world markets.

    In Georgia, a liter of the cheapest grade petrol costs consumers 82
    U.S. cents. In Armenia, the same fuel costs 91 cents -- a significant
    difference in a country where the average monthly wage is about $140.

    Natural gas, meanwhile, is pumped to Armenia by pipeline from Russia.

    Russian gas monopoly Gazprom supplies the fuel at $110 per thousand
    cubic meters, a hefty discount on the price Gazprom customers in
    Europe pay. Armenia is one of several ex-Soviet states that enjoy
    favorable rates for Russian gas.

    "Petrol is getting more expensive," said Transport and Communications
    Minister Andranik Manukian. "Gas ... has not gone up by that much so
    it is preferable to use it."

    "They are niche markets," said Yvon Sellier, director of business
    practices with the World LP Gas Association, a Geneva-based lobby
    group. "(Gas is a) small proportion of the fuel consumed by vehicles."

    NECESSITY MOTHER OF INVENTION

    Crude oil and oil products used to be brought into Armenia by
    rail direct from Azerbaijan's oil fields and refineries. Since a
    territorial conflict between the two neighbors in the early 1990s,
    the border has been closed.

    Now, oil and oil products -- Armenian officials do not say where they
    come from -- have to be shipped in through Armenia's other neighbor
    Georgia, a long and tortuous journey through the Caucasus mountains.

    That creates an extra cost on top of the already high price for fuel
    on world markets.

    In Georgia, a liter of the cheapest grade petrol costs consumers 82
    U.S. cents. In Armenia, the same fuel costs 91 cents -- a significant
    difference in a country where the average monthly wage is about $140.

    Natural gas, meanwhile, is pumped to Armenia by pipeline from Russia.

    Russian gas monopoly Gazprom supplies the fuel at $110 per thousand
    cubic meters, a hefty discount on the price Gazprom customers in
    Europe pay. Armenia is one of several ex-Soviet states that enjoy
    favorable rates for Russian gas.

    "Petrol is getting more expensive," said Transport and Communications
    Minister Andranik Manukian. "Gas ... has not gone up by that much so
    it is preferable to use it."
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