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Armenia's Nairit Plant To Sign 150 Million Euro Investment Agreement

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  • Armenia's Nairit Plant To Sign 150 Million Euro Investment Agreement

    ARMENIA'S NAIRIT PLANT TO SIGN 150 MILLION EURO INVESTMENT AGREEMENT

    ARKA
    Feb 17, 2009

    YEREVAN, February 17. /ARKA/. Armenia's Nairit plant plans to sign
    a $100mln-$150mln investment agreement, reported Vahan Melkonyan,
    director of the plant.

    "In March, we hope to sing an agreement on financial stabilization,
    modernization, reconstruction and repair activities," he told reporters
    on Monday.

    Speaking at the roundtable on anti-crisis management, Melkonyan said
    last spring the plant and a group of Western banks signed a $250mln
    agreement on refinancing and reconstruction.

    "With the syndicated loan being postponed to summer and everything
    cracking down in the fall, the project financing was delayed," he said,
    adding the banks plan to cut threefold investments in Nairit.

    Lack of transparency in the plant's relations with the government
    was a major hindrance as the global financial crisis hit the markets,
    according to Melkonyan.

    "The plant consumes 6% of natural gas flows to Armenia, 9% of generated
    electricity, as well as 100% of thermal power generated by Yerevan
    TPP which is now undergoing repairs," he added.

    The major difficulty while drawing up a business plan was that the
    price of thermal power has not been fixed yet, Melkonyan pointed out.

    "The business environment we are working in is not favorable for
    large enterprises. It is mean for small and medium-scale businesses,
    he concluded.

    Armenia's chemical firm Nairit plant was a chloroprene rubber producing
    monopoly in the Soviet Union. In 1989, the enterprise closed down
    for environmental reasons and opened partially in 1992-1993.

    In 2001, Nairit plant was supplied with state-of-the-art production
    line to produce chloroprene rubber and repay its debts.

    In 2006, the British Rainoville Property Limited paid $40mln to become
    the 90% shareholder of the plant, with the RA Government holding the
    rest of the shares.

    Last November, the enterprise had to lay off 1,528 workers due to
    the global crisis, hoping to call them back on March 1.
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