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  • Yerevan Wants To Open Up To Iran

    YEREVAN WANTS TO OPEN UP TO IRAN

    EurasiaNet.org
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/64910
    Jan 26 2012
    NY

    As the European Union, the United States and a host of other nations
    gear up to cut Iran off, Armenia is pursuing joint projects with
    Tehran that could potentially open new conduits to the outside world.

    On January 23, the EU decided to impose an embargo on Iranian oil,
    to start in July, provided Tehran continues to obstruct international
    efforts to monitor its nuclear program. The United States, meanwhile,
    in late December tightened its sanctions on Iran.

    A nation like Armenia, which receives tens of millions of dollars
    annually in US assistance, might be expected to quickly align itself
    behind the Western-spearheaded embargo. But Armenia has been itself
    blockaded since the early 1990s by two of its four neighbors, Turkey
    and Azerbaijan. Given that circumstance, policymakers in Yerevan view
    Iran as a lifeline.

    The centerpiece of Armenian-Iranian cooperation is a planned
    365-kilometer-long oil pipeline, which would originate in Tabriz and be
    capable of delivering 1.5 million liters of gasoline and diesel daily
    to the southwestern Armenian town of Yeraskh. Work on the pipeline,
    estimated to cost $160 million -$180 million, is slated to begin
    this year, and to be completed by 2014. Tehran has agreed to pay for
    the section of the oil pipeline that runs through Iranian territory;
    Yerevan would cover the Armenian section.

    US sanctions can target a $20-million-plus investment "that directly
    and significantly contributes to the enhancement of Iran's ability to
    develop petroleum resources," as well as related interactions with
    certain Iranian financial institutions, such as the Central Bank of
    the Islamic Republic of Iran. But, even as the Obama administration
    intensifies efforts to rally countries around the Iran embargo,
    no official word appears to have been given on whether the
    Iranian-Armenian oil pipeline project is "sanctionable."

    At present, Armenian leaders say the international embargo campaign
    against Iran won't stop Yerevan's plan to build the pipeline,
    which experts at the Armenian Energy Ministry estimate will save
    the country up to 30 percent per year in energy costs. "They [Iran]
    always have problems, but we continue to work," Energy and Natural
    Resources Minister Armen Movsisian told EurasiaNet.org. The project,
    he added, will begin "soon."

    Movsisian did not specify whether or not the Armenian government has
    discussed with Washington how the sanctions would apply to the Iranian
    oil pipeline, or other Armenian projects with Iran. The US Embassy
    in Yerevan did not respond to questions from EurasiaNet.org in time
    for publication. An alleged 2006 cable from the embassy, published by
    Wikileaks, noted that it would be "extremely difficult" for Armenia
    to agree to US sanctions against Iran, "given the critical energy
    links between the two counties and Armenia's geo-political situation."

    Representatives from Armenia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
    Ministry of Economy declined to comment on the prospects for any of
    the country's projects with Iran.

    Armenia already makes use of a 140-kilometer-long natural gas
    pipeline from Iran that has a delivery capacity of 2.3 billion cubic
    meters per year. A hydropower project and a railway project, both
    dependent on Iranian financing, are also in the works. A 2.64-megawatt
    Iranian-Armenian wind farm exists in the northern region of Lori.

    As it has for the gas pipeline, some Armenian analysts believe that
    Washington will turn a blind eye to the potential construction of
    a Tabriz- Yeraskh pipeline. Energy cooperation with Iran has been
    touted by Armenia as a way to diversify its energy supplies away from
    Russia - a key regional priority for the United States. "Because the
    West is well aware of the fact that Armenia, not by its fault, is in
    a two-sided blockade, and in the case of war [against Iran] might
    find itself up against a wall, a more lenient approach is shown to
    us, and under these circumstances, the projects might be continued,"
    argued Armenian National Academy of Sciences senior researcher Gohar
    Iskandarian, an Iranian studies specialist.

    By contrast, a gas pipeline from Pakistan to Iran has produced
    discussions on how the project could affect US aid to Islamabad,
    the US State Department announced on January 3. The Russia factor is
    most likely why Armenia's own Iranian pipeline has not led to similar
    discussions about the status of Yerevan's roughly $40 million in
    aid from the United States. That factor also appears to play a role
    elsewhere in the region.

    On January 23, The Wall Street Journal cited an unidentified
    congressional aide as saying that US legislators would agree to exempt
    the BP-led Shah Deniz II natural gas project in the Caspian Sea from
    sanctions, even though it involves a minority Iranian stake. The
    Journal reported the aide as saying that a "broad-based consensus"
    exists in the US Congress "that our sanctions policy should impose
    maximum economic pain on the Iranians without allowing Russia to hold
    Eastern Europe hostage for energy supplies."

    In the wake of the European Union's decision to ban new oil contracts
    with Iran and freeze Iranian Central Bank assets, questions are
    arising about Tehran's ability to finance any of its Armenian
    projects. Stepan Safarian, a former political analyst who now heads
    the opposition Heritage Party's parliamentary faction, believes
    efforts to tighten an international embargo could spur Iran to
    cooperate with Armenia. "Iran's priority today is to break through
    the isolation surrounding it, and, for that, Iran might put aside
    economic interests and implement the projects purely out of a political
    motivation," reasoned Safarian, who attributed Iranian President
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's December 23 visit to Yerevan to such an interest.

    During his trip, the Iranian leader asserted that no "negative
    or prohibiting circumstance ... could hinder the development of
    [bilateral] relations."

    Iskandarian, the Iran expert, reasons that if Tehran lacks funds
    to pursue the projects with Armenia, Iranian leaders could look
    for private financing, or possibly obtain investments from China or
    India, two countries which oppose US sanctions and which have evolving
    interests in the South Caucasus.

    Similarly, Energy Minister Movsisian maintains that international
    wariness toward Iran is unlikely to frustrate Armenia's plans to use
    private investors to finance its own $100-million share of the oil
    pipeline project. "It won't be hard to raise the money," he said.

    "This project has great economic prospects and so finding investors
    is not a problem."

    Editor's note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for ArmeniaNow.com
    in Yerevan.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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