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Conflict With Russia Cost Georgia Two Billion Euros: Study

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  • Conflict With Russia Cost Georgia Two Billion Euros: Study

    CONFLICT WITH RUSSIA COST GEORGIA TWO BILLION EUROS: STUDY
    by Luc Andre

    Agence France Presse
    Sept 3 2008

    The Georgian-Russian conflict has cost Tbilisi roughly two billion
    euros (2.8 billion dollars), according to a study by the Vienna
    Institute for International Economic Studies (WIIW) published
    Wednesday.

    The figure takes into account material damage, which Georgian President
    Mikheil Saakashvili last month valued at 1.4 billion euros, and future
    losses in production, exports and investment, the report said.

    "Georgia has experienced a real boom in recent years, noticeably from
    the construction of an oil and gas pipeline. (But) investor confidence
    risks being dented following the crisis," said one of the report's
    authors, Vasily Astrov.

    He added that violence could also return to the Nagorny Karabakh
    region, which crosses over the oil pipeline and is the subject of an
    unresolved dispute between Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    The WIIW study said the crisis could jeopardise a European Union
    project to bypass Russia for natural gas, because of investor concern
    over the reliability of Georgia as a major transit country for gas
    supplies into Europe.

    In a bid to reduce its reliance on Russian supplies, the EU is pinning
    its hopes on the construction of a 3,300-kilometre (2,050-mile)
    pipeline, running from the Caspian Sea through the Caucasus via Turkey
    and the Balkan states to Austria.

    "It is possible that Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan are going to stop
    transporting their hydrocarbons through Georgia. Moscow buys a lot
    of hydrocarbons as well and can threaten to force down the price,"
    the study quoted Astrov as saying.

    But with strong backing from the West, the government in Tbilisi is
    able to rely on international aid to help it repair the damage from
    the fighting.

    Last week, the United States pledged one billion dollars (691
    million euros) to Georgia, while the International Monetary Fund
    (IMF) allocated almost 519 million euros.

    The EU also promised Monday 15 million euros to Georgia during
    its extraordinary summit and promised to organise an emergency
    international donor conference to help pay for the country's
    reconstruction effort.

    The WIIW study also examined the future for the Georgian separatist
    regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, whose calls for independence
    following the conflict were recognised by Moscow, and on Wednesday,
    by Nicaragua.

    Astrov wrote that South Ossetia, with its 70,000 residents, is able to
    rely on subsidies from Moscow, while Abkhazia can revive its tourism
    sector, long healthy in Soviet times.

    In the long term, the authors argue that a more defiant Russia could
    inflict great economic harm on Georgia.

    "Foreign investment is under threat. It is not so much an issue of
    losing money, of which Moscow has a lot, but the loss of technological
    contributions and information which come from these investments,"
    Astrov said.

    But it is not just the EU that stands to lose out in the event of an
    energy dispute in the Causcasus. "Russia also relies on Europe for
    its hydrocarbon exports. It is prepared to pay more, unlike China,"
    the report added.
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