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More Details Of Russian-Armenian Gas Deal Released

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  • More Details Of Russian-Armenian Gas Deal Released

    MORE DETAILS OF RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN GAS DEAL RELEASED
    By Anna Saghabalian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 31 2006

    New details emerged on Tuesday of the latest Russian-Armenia energy
    deal that will give Russia's state-run Gazprom monopoly a commanding
    share in Armenia's natural gas distribution network and, most probably,
    the incoming gas pipeline from Iran.

    Karen Karapetian, director general of the ArmRosGazprom (ARG) network
    operator, said Gazprom will pay $118.8 million to raise its share in
    ARG from the current 45 percent to 58 percent.

    The takeover was officially announced by the Russian energy giant
    on Friday and confirmed by President Robert Kocharian on Monday. It
    appears to be part of a broader Russian-Armenian agreement reached last
    April. That deal allowed Armenia to temporarily avoid a doubling of
    the price of imported Russian gas in exchange for ceding more energy
    assets to Moscow. Those include the incomplete Fifth Unit of the big
    thermal power plant in Hrazdan.

    Karapetian revealed that Fifth Unit formally belongs ARG, another 45
    percent of which has until now been owned by the Armenian government.

    That stake will be diluted to approximately 30 percent as a result
    of the latest deal.

    "This is the sum needed for buying the Fifth Unit," Karapetian said
    of the $118.8 million to be paid by Gazprom. "Who is buying it?

    ArmRosGazprom. By what means? By means of the issuance of additional
    shares [in ARG]. Who is buying the new shares? Gazprom."

    "Why not the government of Armenia? Ask the government," he added.

    The government announced in April that the Russians will pay $248.8
    million for the modern facility and spend an additional $180 million on
    completing it in the next few years. The lump sum may well be including
    the cost of the first Armenian section of the under-construction
    pipeline from Iran which is widely expected to be incorporated into
    the ARG network.

    Armenian officials for months denied reports that Russian control of
    the Iran-Armenia pipeline is another, unpublicized provision of the
    April deal. Still, Prime Minister indicated last week that this is the
    case, arguing that "it would be illogical to have two gas distribution
    networks in Armenia." A leading Moscow daily, "Kommersant," described
    on Tuesday the anticipated Russian takeover of the pipeline as the
    Kremlin's "main, if not the sole, geopolitical victory in the region
    registered in the last several years."

    Karapetian claimed, however, that the government in Yerevan has
    not yet decided who will own the pipeline. "Gazprom is right to be
    willing to buy the pipeline," he said. "But I don't know whether or
    not Armenia will agree to sell it."

    The overall deal will reinforce Russia's already pervasive presence
    in the Armenian energy sector which government critics in Yerevan
    say is turning into an economic stranglehold. But Karapetian strongly
    defended it, downplaying the fact that the bulk of the Armenian gas
    infrastructure is now owned by Gazprom and another Russian energy
    firm, ITERA.

    "We remain an Armenian company not only because we pay taxes and are
    registered in Armenia but because you will find few companies that
    have invested $83 million here in the last four years," he told a
    news conference.

    Armenia's severe energy crisis of the early 1990s disrupted
    centralized gas supplies to virtually all individual consumers. ARG,
    which currently employs some 6,000 people, began slowly but steadily
    restoring them shortly after its establishment as a Russian-Armenian
    joint venture in 1997. The process gained momentum in 2002 and seems
    to be nearing completion.

    According to the ARG chief executive, 84 percent of the country's
    households now have access to gas, saving at least $160 million in
    combined expenditures on winter heating each year.
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