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Armenia Deepens Economic Ties With Iran

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  • Armenia Deepens Economic Ties With Iran

    ARMENIA DEEPENS ECONOMIC TIES WITH IRAN
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    July 25 2007

    Armenia and Iran have agreed to give new impetus to their
    bilateral relations and press ahead with the implementation of more
    multimillion-dollar energy projects. The agreements were announced
    in Yerevan after the July 20 meeting of their intergovernmental
    commission on economic cooperation, co-chaired by Iranian Foreign
    Minister Manuchehr Motaki and Armenian Energy Minister Armen Movsisian.

    Motaki also held separate talks with President Robert Kocharian
    and other Armenian officials. Official press releases cited them as
    praising the Armenian-Iranian relationship and stressing the need
    to utilize its untapped commercial potential. Motaki was reported to
    be satisfied with "thorough discussions" held during the commission
    meeting. He and Movsisian divulged key details of those discussion
    at a joint news conference.

    Movsisian revealed that in "one or two months" the two sides would
    start work on a third high-voltage transmission line linking the power
    grids of Armenia and Iran. The facility will enable a substantial
    increase in exports of Armenian electricity to the Islamic Republic,
    which is expected after the completion of a pipeline that will pump
    Iranian natural gas to Armenia. The pipeline's first Armenian section
    was inaugurated last March in the presence of Kocharian and Iranian
    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

    Construction of its second, much longer stretch is due to be completed
    by the end of next year. That will allow Armenia to annually import
    up to 2.3 billion cubic meters of Iranian gas, or approximately twice
    the level of its current gas imports from Russia.

    It is expected that much of Iranian gas will be converted into the
    electricity that will be supplied to Iran.

    Another Armenian-Iranian energy project involves the construction of
    two big hydroelectric plants on either side of the Arax River, marking
    the border between the two countries. Movsisian announced that its
    construction would likely start early next year. It is still not clear,
    however, how the Armenian side will finance its share of the project,
    estimated at $200 million. Some analysts believe that it will borrow
    the required sum from the Iranian government. Tehran already lent
    Yerevan $34 million to construct the first pipeline section.

    Also on the agenda of the commission meeting was the Russian-backed
    ambitious idea of building a big oil refinery near Meghri, a small
    Armenian town close to the Iranian border. Kocharian reportedly
    discussed it with Russian President Vladimir Putin last January.

    Around that time an oil subsidiary of Russia's Gazprom monopoly
    confirmed reports that it is interested in the project and ready,
    in principle, to provide most of the hundreds of millions of dollars
    needed for its implementation. The project envisages that Iranian
    crude will be delivered to Meghri through a 200-kilometer pipeline
    before being turned into gasoline and other oil products that will be
    shipped to Iran by rail. Despite its vast oil reserves, the Islamic
    Republic lacks refining facilities and has to import gasoline to
    meet domestic demand. Officials have said the refinery would have
    the capacity to process about 3 million tons of oil each year.

    The governments of Armenia, Iran, and Russia recently formed an ad
    hoc working group tasked with looking into the matter. It is scheduled
    to hold its first meeting before the end of this month.

    According to Movsisian, high-level government officials from the
    three countries plan to meet in September to discuss the group's
    recommendations.

    It also emerged that Yerevan and Tehran plan to sign a free trade
    agreement soon in order to boost the volume of their commercial
    exchange, which remains quite modest in both absolute and relative
    terms. One of the apparent reasons for that is Iran's huge import
    tariffs that effectively keep the Iranian market off limits to Armenian
    manufacturers. A statement by the Armenian government quoted Motaki
    as telling Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian that facilitating imports
    from Armenia is now a "priority" for Tehran. Motaki sounded optimistic
    about broader Armenian-Iranian trade, telling journalists that its
    volume could more than double to $500 million this year.

    These developments come just over a month after the United States
    publicly expressed concern at Armenia's growing relations with Iran
    through its then charge d'affaires in Yerevan, Anthony Godfrey.

    Speaking at a June 15 news conference, Godfrey warned that those
    ties could run counter to U.S. sanctions imposed on Tehran over
    its controversial nuclear program. He said that although Washington
    appreciates the "transparent way in which the government of Armenia
    conducts its energy relations with Iran," it expects Yerevan to be a
    "more active partner" in US-led international efforts to prevent Iran
    from developing nuclear weapons.

    Armenia has until now managed to maintain close political and economic
    ties with Iran, while being one of the world's leading per-capita
    recipients of U.S. economic aid. The U.S. warning could make it
    more difficult for Yerevan to continue to pursue what it calls a
    "complementary" foreign policy. Still, Armenian Foreign Minister
    Vartan Oskanian insisted on June 19 that his country's growing
    cooperation with its large Muslim neighbor does not breach the U.S. and
    international sanctions and will not damage U.S.-Armenian relations.

    A warm rapport with Iran is a key element of Armenia's national
    security doctrine and a rare point of consensus among its main
    political parties. They believe that the landlocked South Caucasus
    state, blockaded by neighboring Azerbaijan and Turkey, has no choice
    but to be a close partner of what is one of its few conduits to the
    outside world.

    (Azg, 21 July; Regnum, July 20; Statements by the press services of
    Armenia's president and government, July 20; Arminfo, June 19)
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