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Armenia Cedes Control Of Pipeline To Gazprom

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  • Armenia Cedes Control Of Pipeline To Gazprom

    ARMENIA CEDES CONTROL OF PIPELINE TO GAZPROM

    Bloomberg News, The Associated Press
    Thursday, April 6, 2006

    MOSCOW Gazprom said Thursday that it had signed a 25-year agreement
    with the former Soviet republic of Armenia that includes provisions
    granting the Russian natural gas giant control of part of an
    Armenian-Iranian natural gas pipeline and a power-generating unit at
    the Razdan-5 electric plant.

    The agreement also obliges Armenia to give Gazprom's Armenian joint
    venture ownership rights to the 197-kilometer, or 122-mile, stretch
    of the pipeline to Iran, which has yet to be built, as well as the
    right to export electricity produced at the Razdan-5 power plant.

    The agreement sets a price for Armenia of $110 per 1,000 cubic meters
    of natural gas until Jan. 1, 2009, according to a Gazprom statement.

    Opposition politicians in Armenia have already expressed concern
    over Russia's control of the small country's energy infrastructure,
    an impact that the new deal will magnify.

    Gazprom has sharply raised prices recently for Ukraine, Georgia
    and Moldova.

    It argues that it is merely ending subsidies to former Soviet republics
    and bringing the rates closer to market prices, but critics say the
    Kremlin is using Russia's energy wealth as a political weapon.

    A top Gazprom executive this week called for the tripling of prices
    in Belarus, the last former Soviet republic to pay significantly
    below-market prices for Russian natural gas.

    Armenia is Russia's chief ally in the strategic Caucasus Mountain
    region, partly because it is host to a Russian military base. Moscow
    already largely controls the Razdan-5 plant, the country's main
    electricity producer, which it received in 2003 as a debt payment,
    and Armenia is wholly dependent on Russia for natural gas supplies. $@

    Norwegians lift U.K. supply

    Statoil and Norsk Hydro, the two largest oil companies in Norway,
    booked more space on a new pipeline from Norway that could meet about
    20 percent of Britain's demand for natural gas, a top executive at
    the pipeline's operator said, Bloomberg News reported from London.

    The pipeline will connect North Sea gas fields to Easington on
    England's eastern coast. It is to start delivering gas from existing
    fields in October and a year later connect to Ormen Lange, a new gas
    field operated by Norsk Hydro.

    "The owners of the pipeline have booked the capacity for a good many
    years in a way that there will be good utilization of capacity," said
    Thor Otto Lohne, a senior vice president at the Norwegian pipeline
    operator Gasso.

    At 1,200 kilometers, Ormen Lange will be the world's largest undersea
    pipeline, capable of shipping 70 million cubic meters of natural gas
    a day. The entire Ormen Lange project, named after a ship owned by
    the Viking king Olav Tryggvason, includes an onshore processing plant.

    Britain, the European Union's biggest user of natural gas, is
    increasingly dependent on imports and stored supplies as supplies in
    the North Sea dwindle.

    MOSCOW Gazprom said Thursday that it had signed a 25-year agreement
    with the former Soviet republic of Armenia that includes provisions
    granting the Russian natural gas giant control of part of an
    Armenian-Iranian natural gas pipeline and a power-generating unit at
    the Razdan-5 electric plant.

    The agreement also obliges Armenia to give Gazprom's Armenian joint
    venture ownership rights to the 197-kilometer, or 122-mile, stretch
    of the pipeline to Iran, which has yet to be built, as well as the
    right to export electricity produced at the Razdan-5 power plant.

    The agreement sets a price for Armenia of $110 per 1,000 cubic meters
    of natural gas until Jan. 1, 2009, according to a Gazprom statement.

    Opposition politicians in Armenia have already expressed concern
    over Russia's control of the small country's energy infrastructure,
    an impact that the new deal will magnify.

    Gazprom has sharply raised prices recently for Ukraine, Georgia
    and Moldova.

    It argues that it is merely ending subsidies to former Soviet republics
    and bringing the rates closer to market prices, but critics say the
    Kremlin is using Russia's energy wealth as a political weapon.

    A top Gazprom executive this week called for the tripling of prices
    in Belarus, the last former Soviet republic to pay significantly
    below-market prices for Russian natural gas.

    Armenia is Russia's chief ally in the strategic Caucasus Mountain
    region, partly because it is host to a Russian military base. Moscow
    already largely controls the Razdan-5 plant, the country's main
    electricity producer, which it received in 2003 as a debt payment,
    and Armenia is wholly dependent on Russia for natural gas supplies. $@

    Norwegians lift U.K. supply

    Statoil and Norsk Hydro, the two largest oil companies in Norway,
    booked more space on a new pipeline from Norway that could meet about
    20 percent of Britain's demand for natural gas, a top executive at
    the pipeline's operator said, Bloomberg News reported from London.

    The pipeline will connect North Sea gas fields to Easington on
    England's eastern coast. It is to start delivering gas from existing
    fields in October and a year later connect to Ormen Lange, a new gas
    field operated by Norsk Hydro.

    "The owners of the pipeline have booked the capacity for a good many
    years in a way that there will be good utilization of capacity," said
    Thor Otto Lohne, a senior vice president at the Norwegian pipeline
    operator Gasso.

    At 1,200 kilometers, Ormen Lange will be the world's largest undersea
    pipeline, capable of shipping 70 million cubic meters of natural gas
    a day. The entire Ormen Lange project, named after a ship owned by
    the Viking king Olav Tryggvason, includes an onshore processing plant.

    Britain, the European Union's biggest user of natural gas, is
    increasingly dependent on imports and stored supplies as supplies in
    the North Sea dwindle.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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