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Government Signals Russian Control Of Iran-Armenia Pipeline

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  • Government Signals Russian Control Of Iran-Armenia Pipeline

    GOVERNMENT SIGNALS RUSSIAN CONTROL OF IRAN-ARMENIA PIPELINE
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 25 2006

    Prime Minister Andranik Markarian on Wednesday effectively confirmed
    reports that Russian energy companies are set to gain a controlling
    stake in a key pipeline which is due to start pumping Iranian natural
    gas to Armenia next year.

    Markarian indicated that his government will likely sell the first
    Armenian section of the under-construction pipeline to ArmRosGazprom
    (ARG), the Russian-Armenian joint venture that owns Armenia's gas
    distribution network.

    The 40 kilometer section was reportedly covered by a controversial
    April agreement that allowed Armenia to temporarily avoid a surge
    in the price of gas imported from Russia in return for handing over
    more energy assets to Gazprom, the state-run Russian monopoly. The
    most important of them is the incomplete but modern Fifth Unit of
    the country's largest thermal power plant located in the central town
    of Hrazdan.

    Gazprom initially confirmed but later refuted reports that it will
    also get hold of the Armenian pipeline from Iran as part of the deal.

    Officials in Yerevan also denied that.

    However, the Yerevan daily "Haykakan Zhamanak" reported last week
    that the Russians will after all win control of the pipeline through
    the ARG operator, in which Gazprom and the Russian-owned group ITERA
    hold 45 percent and 10 percent shares respectively. The remaining 45
    percent belongs to the Armenian government. The paper cited a Russian
    document which presented the takeover as a fait accompli that will
    be formalized by January 1.

    Markarian appeared to confirm the information as he spoke to
    reporters after his cabinet's regular question-and-answer session
    in parliament. "We are not talking about the sale [of the pipeline]
    as such," he said. "It's just that Armenia may invest in the charter
    capital [of ARG] or we will jointly make investments because it would
    be illogical to have two gas distribution networks in Armenia."

    Markarian added that Moscow and Yerevan hope to reach agreement on
    the issue by the time the pipeline comes on stream later this year
    or early next.

    Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian, who has been actively involved
    in Russian-Armenian energy dealings, also strongly hinted at the
    pipeline's imminent transfer under ARG control. He said he will ask
    the ARG chief executive, Karen Karapetian, to publicly "explain the
    situation in great detail."

    The pipeline from Iran was supposed to end Armenia's strong dependence
    on Russian gas and other energy resources. Critics say that by putting
    it under de facto Russian control the Armenian government would only
    deepen that dependence. Moscow is thought to have already made sure
    that the pipeline's diameter is not large enough to re-export Iranian
    gas to Georgia and other countries.
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