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Oil Prospecting Seen As Latest Risk To Armenian Lake

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  • Oil Prospecting Seen As Latest Risk To Armenian Lake

    OIL PROSPECTING SEEN AS LATEST RISK TO ARMENIAN LAKE

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #770
    March 13 2015

    Right now, only exploratory work is planned, but environmentalists
    fear for the worst if anything is found.

    by Arpi Harutyunyan

    Environmentalists in Armenia are alarmed by the government's decision
    to allow oil prospecting in an area that includes Lake Sevan,the
    region's largest freshwater resource.

    The ministry for energy and natural resources has granted exploration
    company Blackstairs Energy Armenia permission to begin an11 million
    US dollar search for oil and gas deposits in 2015-16.

    Blackstairs Energy Armenia, a locally-registered firm,was set up in
    2008 as a joint venture between Canadian company Vangold, Ireland's
    Blackstairs Energy and the Armenian government.

    According to Vangold, the company has obtained "very encouraging" data
    that provide "compelling evidence for the existence of significant
    accumulations of hydrocarbons within the licence area". That area,
    known as the Central Depression, is located in central and southern
    Armenia and includes part of Lake Sevan.

    Near the lakeside, prospecting work is planned at the villages of
    Hayravank, Tsaghkashen and Noradus.

    The lake is protected by a special law passed in 2001 which forbids
    any activity liable to damage its ecosystem. Environmentalists have
    frequently raised the alarm about projects that seem to contravene
    at least the spirit of the law, from fish farming to gold mining and
    over-use of Sevan's waters.

    "As long as it's just exploration, we can't say the law is being
    broken," Silva Adamyan, coordinator of the Public Environmental
    Alliance, told IWPR. "But if oil reserves are found, the next step
    has to be production. Drilling operations on Lake Sevan's territory
    is prohibited by law, as it would have devastating consequences for
    the lake."

    Adamyan insisted that Armenia's green activists would be happy if
    oil reserves were discovered, as long as it was not at the expense
    of Lake Sevan.

    Unlike its oil-rich neighbour Azerbaijan, Armenia has few known
    natural fuel sources and has to import natural gas from Russia and
    to a lesser extent Iran.

    While the neighbouring Azerbaijan has rich deposits of oil,
    environmentalists doubt that Armenia possesses untapped reserves.

    Ruben Movsisyan, the director of Yerevan State University's Centre
    for Sustainable Development, is pretty sure that the prospectors will
    not find anything commercially significant.

    "In the Soviet era, wells were drilled atArmavir and a little gas
    was found. And a very small oil deposit was found in the village of
    Voghjaberd on the road to Garni. Foreign organisations then drilled
    a well in Garni to a depth of about 3,200 metres, but nothing was
    found," he told IWPR.

    However, Blackstairs Energy Armenia says data collected in the Soviet
    period is unreliable.

    "The research conducted from 1947 to 1990 was... done using
    rudimentary geological and geophysical technology," the company said
    in a statement.

    The company insists that its activities are designed to minimise any
    environmental impact.

    Kristine Vardanyan, ofBlackstairsEnergy Armenia, said that since only
    exploratory work was to be conducted at this stage, using safe methods,
    there was no cause for concern.

    Tehmina Arzumanyan, spokesperson for the Ministry of Nature Protection
    ,stressed that permission had been granted only tolocate potential
    oilfields, not to drill in them.

    "If, as a result of exploration, it turns out that there is gas or
    oil underground in Armenia, the company must seek an additional
    expert study or apply for a license to drill wells in the area,"
    Arzumanyan told IWPR.

    But Karine Danielyan, chair of the Association for Sustainable Human
    Development, argued that the application which Blackstairs Energy
    Armenia submitted to carry out prospecting was incomplete.

    "This document does not contain any assessment of the impact on the
    environment; it is merely descriptive.Instead of proposing safety
    solutions, it only expresses good intentions," Danielyan said.

    Movsisyan pointed out that as a country with no oil industry, Armenia
    had never developed legislation to govern the pollution and other
    risks that extraction would entail.

    Environmentalists argue that decisionsof such momentous importance
    need to be discussed more broadly. Liana Asoyan, coordinator of the
    Aarhus Centre in Gavar, says public hearings have been held in all the
    regions where exploration is planned, but civil society organisations
    were not invited.

    "We were not informed that these hearings were going on,"
    she told IWPR. "So the Aarhus Centre in Yerevan and Gavar
    organised a meetingitself, and invited company representatives and
    environmentalists.We made our position clear - that Lake Sevanshould be
    left alone,and that they should not even plan any drilling work there."

    Asoyan says it is unclear what will happen if oil is found.

    "We've been assured that there won't be any drilling in Lake Sevan.

    But if they do find oil, what would the company be interested in
    other than extracting the reserves?" she said.

    Arpi Harutyunyan is a freelance journalist in Armenia.

    https://iwpr.net/global-voices/oil-prospecting-seen-latest-risks-armenian




    From: A. Papazian
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