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Iran, Armenia Insist On Energy, Transport Ties

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  • Iran, Armenia Insist On Energy, Transport Ties

    IRAN, ARMENIA INSIST ON ENERGY, TRANSPORT TIES

    Mehr News Agency
    April 14 2009
    Iran

    Tehran, 14 April: Iran and Armenia on Monday [14 April] discussed
    avenues for developing ties especially in energy and transport sectors.

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan arrived in Tehran on Monday at the
    head of a high-ranking economic and political delegation.

    Bilateral relations should be expanded in different fields including
    trade, energy, and transportation, President Mahmud Ahmadinezhad
    Enhanced Coverage LinkingMahmud Ahmadinezhad -Search using: Biographies
    Plus News News, Most Recent 60 Days told a joint meeting of senior
    delegations from Iran and Armenia held in the presidential office.

    Ahmadinezhad said Tehran considers developing ties with Armenian as
    a foreign policy priority and called for regional and international
    cooperation with Yerevan.

    The growing cooperation between Tehran and Yerevan must be expanded
    in all areas, the two presidents stressed in their private meeting in
    which they also discussed the most important regional and international
    issues.

    The two presidents insisted that regional and international
    developments have made close cooperation between Iran and Armenia
    imperative.

    At a press conference on Saturday in Yerevan, Sargsyan stated that
    the global economic crisis will not affect the implementation of
    Tehran-Yerevan joint ventures.

    Yerevan places paramount importance on proposed projects and those
    under way, such as the oil pipeline, the joint railway, and the
    hydroelectric power plant, Sargsyan said.

    Iran and Armenia reached a primary agreement in 2007 on the
    construction of a 300-kilometre oil pipeline from the Iranian city
    of Tabriz to the Armenian border city of Meghri.

    The two countries also reached an agreement in Yerevan on 4 April,
    2009 to establish a railway that would connect the two countries to
    the Black Sea as a strategic transit route.

    The 470-kilometre railway would take five years to build and cost up
    to 1.2 billion dollars to complete.

    The two countries have also agreed to build a hydroelectric power
    station on the border Aras River that will produce 800 million
    kilowatts of electricity per annum.
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