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  • Russia Gas Price Hike Shocks Armenians

    Eurasia Review
    Feb 21 2010

    Russia Gas Price Hike Shocks Armenians
    Sunday, February 21, 2010
    By Naira Melkumyan


    The company that has a monopoly on selling Russian gas to Armenia has
    warned it will raise prices for ordinary consumers by 40 per cent in
    April, sparking anger in the country.

    Armrosgazprom, a Russian-Armenian joint venture, has sought permission
    for the increase from the official regulator and also wants to raise
    the gas price for businesses by 20 per cent. It is expected to be
    approved.

    With Armenia still struggling to haul itself out of recession ` the
    economy contracted by 14.4 per cent in 2009 - the proposals could
    severely harm the economy, as well as ordinary gas users, observers
    say.

    `This is just insane. My husband has an unpredictable salary because
    of the crisis. I don't work, and such a rise would seriously hit us in
    the pocket, and then a massive increase in prices would follow. What
    would we live on?' asked Rita Sargsyan, a 55-year-old Yerevan
    resident, reflecting a widely held view here.

    Armrosgazprom said the price of gas will rise from April 1 to 136
    drams (35 US cents) per cubic metre from the current 96 drams. The
    increase follows a decision by Gazprom, the Russian energy giant that
    owns 80 per cent of Armrosgazprom, to hike prices for gas exported to
    Armenia by 17 per cent from the beginning of April.

    Lusine Harutiunyan, spokeswoman for the energy ministry, said
    Armrosgazprom had the right to raise prices and the government could
    do nothing to stop it, since it was only a minority shareholder.

    Experts said the price rise would immediately lead to increases for
    electricity, transport and consumer goods, especially since three
    water companies have already indicated that they want to raise their
    tariffs by around two-thirds.

    `Considering the increase in unemployment in the country, which in
    2009 was already ten per cent, and the fall in the rate of economic
    growth, a gas price rise will directly impact on a significant part of
    the population,' Abgar Yeghoyan, head of the Union for the Protection
    of Consumer Rights, said.

    The budget for this year includes no provision for increases in
    pensions, unemployment benefits or anything else that could compensate
    for the price rise.

    `When we raised this question during discussion of the 2010 budget,
    the government said that they were concerned by the question of
    inflation, but it is already clear that the price rise for gas as the
    main energy source will lead to increases in the prices of other
    products,' said Artsvik Minasyan, a deputy in parliament from the
    opposition Dashnaktsutyun party.

    `The government must propose salary and pension increases, or at least
    work out a mechanism of subsidies.'

    The government has said it is concerned by the price increases,
    however, and promised to work out measures to limit their impact.

    `The question of prices is permanently at the centre of the
    government's attention and it is preparing a package of measures aimed
    at controlling inflation,' Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan told
    parliament.

    But he later said he was not considering subsidising gas prices from
    the budget to help keep bills low.

    `I have not considered this, and I advise everyone against it. I am
    not a supporter of that,' he said.

    According to Vazgen Khachikyan, head of the state social security
    service at the ministry of labour and social affairs, the effect of
    the gas price alone ` without any associated rise in electricity cost
    ` would add one per cent to inflation.

    But he said that between 2007 and 2010 pensions almost doubled, at a
    time when inflation did not come close to that rate.

    Last year, the state pension and unemployment benefit were 70 and 55
    dollars a month respectively.

    The government is forecasting that prices will rise by four per cent
    and, according to Vardan Bostandjyan, deputy head of parliament's
    economic committee, it is unlikely that there will any increase in
    pensions before next year.

    The International Monetary Fund, which is currently lending to
    Armenia, forecasts inflation of six per cent this year.

    The fact that gas prices are rising twice as much for consumers as for
    companies has angered consumer rights groups.

    `We want to understand why, when the Russians raise prices by 17 per
    cent, the Armenian company increases prices for companies by 20 per
    cent and for people by 40 per cent,' said Armen Harutiunyan, the state
    ombudsman.

    Armrosgazprom said that the steeper increases for private users was a
    reflection of the higher cost of providing them with gas.

    It also said that it was not seeking to profit from the price rises,
    and was reacting to a 20 per cent contraction in the market caused by
    the financial crisis, which had resulted in it ending the year with a
    loss.

    But, despite the explanations, its price rise caused public figures to
    question the wisdom of Armenia's dependence on Russia for gas
    supplies.

    Vahan Khachatryan, a representative of the opposition Armenian
    National Congress, said that if Armenia had more diversified supplies,
    it could resist such a dramatic price increase.

    `Today Russia has a monopoly. Eighty per cent of the gas we use comes
    from there but we also have a pipeline from Iran, which is hardly
    used,' he said.

    Iranian gas started to arrive in Armenia in 2008, but it sends less
    than three million cubic metres a day, while Russia sends an average
    of more than double that.

    Harutiunyan, the energy ministry spokeswoman, said, `Of course the
    opposition gives this problem a political subtext, but the situation
    is different. Russia as our strategic partner for many years has sold
    us gas at a discount. We were receiving 1,000 cubic metres of gas for
    110 dollars when Europe was paying 300 dollars.'

    Naira Melkumyan is a reporter at Arka News Agency. This article
    originally appeared in Caucasus Reporting Service, produced by the
    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, www.iwpr.net
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