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  • Tbilisi: Gas pipeline provokes disagreement

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Feb 4 2005

    Gas pipeline provokes disagreement
    By M. Alkhazashvili

    Georgia's main gas pipeline has become a topic of much debate within
    the government. The position of the late Prime-Minister Zurab Zhvania
    and State Minister Kakha Bendukidze was that it is possible to sell
    the gas pipeline to the Russian company Gazprom.

    But some analysts think that this move would jeopardize the country's
    energy-security and amount to a betrayal of Georgia's main ally, the
    United States. Speaker of Parliament Nino Burjanadze has also
    expressed her strong opposition to the sale of the pipeline.

    According to the Georgian Constitution, the main gas pipeline is a
    strategic state asset and as such cannot be privatized. Upon becoming
    Minister of Economic Development, however, Kakha Bendukidze stated
    that economics does not recognize the idea of a 'strategic object'
    and therefore even the gas pipeline could be sold in return for
    adequate compensation.

    The only potential buyer of the main gas pipeline at the moment is
    Gazprom. Buying the pipeline is a matter of strategic importance for
    Russia. After the building of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, it will
    be possible to export Iranian gas via Georgia to Europe. It is also
    noteworthy that talks are underway about the possibility of importing
    gas from Iran to Georgia. This Iranian gas would provide competition
    with the Azerbaijani gas being exported through the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Erzrum pipeline.

    When Prime-Minister Zhvania and other officials expressed their
    support for selling the pipeline to Gazprom, Burjanadze immediately
    came out against the move. "I am categorically against gas pipeline
    privatization, especially selling it to Russia. I have already said
    this to the government and I cannot understand why we have to sell it
    to Russia. I am pretty sure that I will have the opportunity to
    negotiate with the president over this issue and present my arguments
    to him. I am convinced that the president will not permit that
    Baku-Erzrum and Baku-Ceyhan to be endangered," said Burjanadze, as
    quoted by the newspaper Rezonansi.

    Zhvania affirmed that the gas pipeline issue will not be resolved
    without Parliament, though he expressed surprise that "this gas
    pipeline is being discussed as a sacred object like Svetitskhoveli
    [Georgian orthodox church in Mtskheta] and the Khakhuli icon."

    The statements by Zhvania and Burjanadze make it obvious that the gas
    pipeline issue is a topic of heated discussion in the Georgian
    administration. Some analysts think that the fate of this state asset
    may reveal the country's real foreign policy orientation.
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