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  • Russia Steps Up Economic Presence In Armenia

    RUSSIA STEPS UP ECONOMIC PRESENCE IN ARMENIA
    Emil Danielyan

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Nov 16 2006

    Russia is boosting its economic presence in Armenia, and recent
    acquisitions are raising new questions about the nature of Yerevan's
    close relationship with Moscow. Armenian President Robert Kocharian's
    administration is downplaying domestic opposition claims that Russia's
    growing economic presence poses a threat to Yerevan's sovereignty.

    "I don't consider [these developments] dangerous," Defense
    Minister Serzh Sarkisian, who also co-chairs a Russian-Armenian
    intergovernmental commission on economic cooperation, told reporters
    on November 6. "Because I have still not seen the Russian side use
    its economic levers in Armenia [for political aims.]"

    Reports that Russia's state-run Gazprom monopoly will raise its stake
    in ArmRosGazprom (ARG), a Russian-Armenian joint venture running
    Armenia's gas infrastructure, from 45 percent to 58 percent were
    confirmed by Kocharian during his latest visit to Moscow. The ARG
    chief executive, Karen Karapetian, explained in late October that the
    deal involves the circulation of $118 million worth of new ARG shares,
    all of which will be bought by Gazprom.

    The Armenian government has until now also possessed 45 percent stake
    in ARG, with the remaining 10 percent controlled by the private Russian
    energy firm, ITERA. The increase in the Armenian gas distributor's
    charter capital will dilute the government's share to just over 30
    percent. Karapetian confirmed that it is part of a complex April 2006
    agreement that allowed Armenia to avoid a doubling of the price of
    Russian gas to $110 million until January 2009. In return, authorities
    in Yerevan controversially agreed to hand over more energy assets
    to Gazprom. Those included the incomplete fifth unit of Armenia's
    largest thermal power plant located in the central town of Hrazdan.

    Armenian officials have indicated in recent weeks that the April deal
    also allows the Russian conglomerate to gain control of a gas pipeline
    from neighboring Iran, currently under construction. Prime Minister
    Andranik Markarian told reporters in late October that the pipeline,
    whose first Armenian section is slated for completion this winter,
    will likely be incorporated into ARG, arguing that "it would be
    illogical to have two gas distribution networks in Armenia."

    All this will give the Russians a near total control over the Armenian
    energy sector. Gazprom is currently Armenia's sole gas supplier,
    and already owns the four other operating units of the Hrazdan
    plant. Another state-run Russian company, the RAO Unified Energy
    Systems (UES) utility, owns a cascade of hydro-electric plants north
    of Yerevan and manages the finances of the nuclear power plant at
    Metsamor. As recently as September 26, UES formalized its $73 million
    takeover of Armenia's electricity distribution network. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Receiving Kocharian in the Kremlin on October 30, Russian President
    Vladimir Putin bluntly described as "shameful" the fact that his
    country is only the third largest investor in the Armenian economy.

    Three days later, a leading Russian mobile phone operator,
    Vimpel-Communications, announced the purchase of a 90 percent share
    in Armenia's national telecommunications company, ArmenTel, from
    the Greek firm OTE. Armenian state regulators gave the green light
    to the deal on November 14. "Putin has no reason to be unhappy,"
    commented the Yerevan newspaper 168 Zham. "His country has received
    80 percent of the energy sector, the backbone of the Armenian economy,
    and many other facilities as gifts from its strategic partner."

    Interestingly, the latest Russian takeovers come amid Yerevan's
    continuing efforts to forge closer political and security links with
    the West. Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian was in Brussels
    on November 14 to sign a detailed plan of actions stemming from the
    European Union's European Neighborhood Policy program that entitle
    Armenia to a privileged relationship with the economic bloc. A day
    earlier, Sarkisian flew to Iraq on a visit aimed at showing support
    for a small contingent of Armenian troops stationed there. Analysts
    believe the influential defense chief, widely seen as a Kocharian
    successor, is thereby trying to enhance his pro-Western credentials.

    Economic dealings with Russia are one of the least transparent areas of
    governance in Armenia, with Kocharian and Sarkisian believed to make
    all key decisions without outside input. Both men have repeatedly
    stated that the controversial deals cut with Moscow are purely
    commercial, infusing the Armenian economy with badly needed capital
    investments. But Armenian opposition leaders and many local analysts
    claim that their main motive is to ensure the Kremlin's support
    for their continued hold on power. Hmayak Hovannisian, a maverick
    parliamentarian sympathetic to Russia, insisted on November 6 that
    the Kocharian-Sarkisian duo has served as the catalyst for the deals.

    "The Russians have a good proverb: Accept what you are given, run
    when you are beaten. If the Armenian authorities are ready to easily
    present strategic facilities, why should Russia refuse to accept
    them?" Hovannisian told a roundtable discussion in Yerevan.

    Whatever the real motives of its two top leaders, Armenia is beginning
    to face the possibility of disruptions in Russian gas supplies as a
    result of the festering confrontation between Russia and neighboring
    Georgia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Adding a
    new twist to the standoff are Gazprom's threats to drastically raise
    the price of its gas for Georgia from $110 to $230 per thousand cubic
    meters unless the pro-Western government in Tbilisi follows Yerevan's
    example and cedes some of its own energy assets, notably the sole
    gas pipeline running from Russia to Armenia.

    [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    "If no agreement on gas deliveries is signed with Georgia [before the
    end of this year], gas will be delivered through Georgian territory
    to Armenia only," the Russian ITAR-TASS news agency quoted Gazprom
    Deputy Chairman Aleksandr Medvedyev as saying November 7.

    There are mounting fears in Yerevan that Georgia could retaliate
    against what its leaders have denounced as "political blackmail"
    by siphoning off the gas intended for Armenia and thus forcing the
    Russians to stop the supplies altogether. It is also unclear what
    the gas price will be for Armenia from January 2009, when nothing
    will prevent Gazprom from charging Yerevan as much as it seeks from
    Tbilisi. The asset handover to Russia may thus have brought only
    temporary relief to Armenian consumers.

    Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.
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