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Armenia's Aluminum Foil Mill Rolls Again

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  • Armenia's Aluminum Foil Mill Rolls Again

    ARMENIA'S ALUMINUM FOIL MILL ROLLS AGAIN
    By Robin Paxton

    Reuters, UK
    July 20 2007

    YEREVAN (Reuters) - The aluminum foil plant on the upper slopes of
    Armenia's capital accounts for around 40 percent of the ex-Soviet
    republic's annual trade.

    Only seven years ago, it was on the brink of ruin.

    "The factory was practically dead," admits Georgy Avetikyan, general
    director of the Armenal plant since its rebirth in 2000.

    "But look around at the equipment we have now," he says, surveying
    a factory floor filled with German-built mills squeezing thin layers
    of foil from metal shipped in from Russia.

    Armenal is owned by United Company RUSAL, the Russian aluminum giant
    controlled by billionaire Oleg Deripaska. After a $70 million revamp
    completed last year, it can produce 25,000 tonnes of aluminum foil --
    12 percent of the total in the former Soviet Union.

    About half of the foil, used mainly to package food, drinks and
    cigarettes, is exported to the European Union, 35 percent to North
    America and 15 percent to the Middle East.

    "Not a single tonne leaves the factory without an order from a client,"
    said Alexander Burdin, director of UC RUSAL's packaging division, which
    supplies aluminum foil to companies such as Kraft Foods and Nestle.

    Aluminum smelting in Yerevan dates back to the 1950s, when the Kanaker
    smelter was among the Soviet Union's leading plants. But when the
    growing city encroached on a plant that was built on its outskirts,
    pollution became a problem.

    The smelter was eventually closed, leaving the foil mill on the same
    site bereft of raw materials. Financial meltdown followed the break-up
    of the Soviet Union and the plant effectively stopped.

    "To produce foil, you need aluminum sheet -- and we didn't have
    any," said Avetikyan. "SibAl came in with their business plan and
    got approval. There were several companies competing."

    ECONOMIC GROWTH

    SibAl, or Siberian Aluminium, was Deripaska's aluminum company at
    the time -- an earlier incarnation of UC RUSAL, built on Siberia's
    giant smelters and hydroelectric power resources.

    Deripaska emerged as the biggest winner from the country's brutal
    aluminum wars of the 1990s, when entrepreneurs vied for control of
    Russia's lucrative natural resources up for grabs after the Soviet
    system crumbled.

    Having built the beginnings of his metals empire in Siberia, the
    man now ranked Russia's second-richest extended his reach across the
    Caucasus to form a joint venture with the Armenian government in 2000.

    Over time, RUSAL increased its ownership of the plant and by 2003
    controlled it outright. It is one of three foil plants owned by the
    company, which is preparing a share float in London that bankers say
    could raise about $8 billion.

    The revival of Armenal mirrors consistent economic growth in the
    country of 3 million people.

    Armenian gross domestic product is set to rise by about 10 percent
    in 2007, the fifth successive year of double-digit growth, and the
    country claims the lowest inflation of any former Soviet state over
    the past seven years.

    Armenal employs over 800 people who earn an average monthly wage
    of about $300, 50 percent more than the national average, says the
    company's press secretary, Alexander Melkumyan.

    A further expansion could follow.

    Burdin says the plant, part of a packaging division that earned UC
    RUSAL $240 million in revenues last year, has enough orders to add
    60 percent to existing capacity.

    Avetikyan, in blue overalls, is just happy to be working again,
    inspecting operations as crane operators hoist aluminum coils to
    the mill.

    "We're producers, not traders," he says.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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