Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia at crossroads

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia at crossroads

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    Aug 28 2014

    Armenia at crossroads

    28 August 2014 - 10:58am

    By Victoria Panfilova, a Nezavisimaya Gazeta columnist, exclusively
    for Vestnik Kavkaza



    Iran and Armenia are two countries in some form of a blockade. Tehran
    is suffering from sanctions imposed because of its nuclear program.
    Communications of Yerevan with Azerbaijan and Turkey are blocked due
    to the occupation of 20% of Azerbaijani territory in Nagorno-Karabakh
    and seven surrounding districts. It seems logical that Tehran and
    Yerevan try to help each other improve the situation. Iran has
    recently offered Armenia to form a free trade zone (FTZ). The offer
    will most likely be accepted. On the other hand, there are some
    problems. Creation of a FTZ will have to match with Armenia's joining
    the Customs Union (CU) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EaEU).

    Washington did express disappointment at the sudden intensification of
    Armenian-Iranian mutual interests a few years ago, at the peak of the
    anti-Iranian sanctions, but it eventually turned a blind eye to the
    developments. The U.S. considered that there would be nothing bad in
    realization of projects of Yerevan and Tehran, considering the
    complicated situation in Armenia. But there was another explanation to
    the serenity in the U.S.: specialists there figured that the two
    countries would achieve nothing. Both versions seem legitimate. The
    cooperation was not intensive, although important for Armenia. U.S.
    experts were right when they said that all the projects would remain
    nothing more than projects.

    According to the agreements, Armenia and Iran were to build a power
    line that would supply Iranian border territories with electricity.
    The sides agreed to build an oil pipeline from Iran to Armenia. The
    Armenian border territories were to build a refinery with enough
    output to make gasoline exports unnecessary for Armenia. As a gesture
    of friendliness, Iran declared zero transit fees for Armenian
    freighters. For some time it announced zero fees for Armenia at the
    ports of Bandar Abbas on the Persian Gulf and Enzeli on the Caspian
    coast.

    "Unfortunately, things did not get any farther than words, not a
    single project has been realized. Not even a single deal has been
    signed, just protocols of intention that have remained intentions. But
    the projects were interesting indeed," Sevak Sarukhanyan, deputy
    director of the Noravank Fund for Strategic Studies, told Vestnik
    Kavkaza. In his opinion, the main problem was lack of money. Iran had
    the financial burden in all the projects. Opportunities were probably
    evaluated incompletely. "The funds needed were not found. Because of
    international sanctions, Tehran had no opportunities for investments
    abroad. The same sanctions were impeding attraction of investments. As
    a result, it was all left on paper," said Sarukhanyan.

    In his words, Iran lost interest in Armenian electricity after a
    couple of years. Concerning petroleum projects, they looked dubious
    from the very start. Building a refinery is a very costly initiative,
    in terms of financing and technologies. Pumping gasoline through the
    pipeline is not a very clear idea, because Iran needs the fuel itself.

    The same problem applies to freighting. The offer to lift fees on
    roads and at ports was a good-neighbourly offer. The question is how
    much freighting is needed to make a profit. No answer has been found.

    "Of all the ideas in the package, I think that only construction of a
    railway line to connect the railways of Iran and Armenia was topical.
    However, that proposal will probably lose value if the
    Qazvin-Rasht-Astara line connecting the railway networks of Iran and
    Azerbaijan is implemented," said Sarukhanyan. In that case, Tehran
    will lose interest in access to Armenia, especially when the Abkhaz
    railway that would give access to Russia through Georgia remains
    closed. Iran will get access to Georgian Black Sea ports through
    Azerbaijan, then to Russia or anywhere else.

    The expert considers the idea to form a FTZ interesting and essential
    for both countries. Firstly, Iran is still under pressure of the
    sanctions and tries to liberalize trade relations with its neighbours.
    Tehran calls it a policy of forming free trade zones and free
    terminals, using them to bypass restrictions and barriers caused by
    Western sanctions. Secondly, Armenia has reconsidered the situation in
    Iran: trade turnover has been dropping in the last years. If they do
    not boost trade, Armenian-Iranian economic relations will stay solely
    in the energy sector.

    "Formation of the FZT does not conflict with Armenia joining the CU
    and the EaEU. You should not think that Iranian goods would start
    entering the CU market without customs fees. It is a purely
    Armenian-Iranian project and any Iranian product entering the CU from
    Armenia will be given a fee," supposes Sevak Sarukhanyan. In general,
    according to the expert, Tehran and Yerevan need to do something in
    the economic sector to make relations in the sector meet at least a
    satisfactory level of bilateral political relations. Armenia and Iran
    have been supporting each other on the world arena in many issues.
    Although the support has not played a decisive role in resolving
    issues, it established good-neighbourly relations. Now they need an
    economic filling. "That is why we can assume that other offers will
    appear after the proposal to form the free trade zone," said
    Sarukhanyan. The question of whether they will be implemented remains
    open.


    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/59352.html

Working...
X