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Ahmadinejad Opens Iranian Gas Pipeline To Armenia

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  • Ahmadinejad Opens Iranian Gas Pipeline To Armenia

    AHMADINEJAD OPENS IRANIAN GAS PIPELINE TO ARMENIA

    Agence France Presse -- English
    March 19, 2007 Monday 2:30 PM GMT

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Armenian counterpart
    inaugurated on Monday a natural gas pipeline reducing energy-strapped
    Armenia's reliance on Russian gas.

    Ahmadinejad and Armenian President Robert Kocharian formally opened
    the pipeline in the Armenian town of Agarak, near the border with Iran.

    "This is a historic event that opens a new period in the relations
    of Iran and Armenia," Kocharian said at the ceremony.

    Surrounded by local villagers, the two presidents lit a symbolic
    torch at the ceremony, which was delayed for hours after heavy
    fog prevented Ahmadinejad's helicopter from flying to the area. He
    eventually arrived by car.

    "Our relations have deepened over the last 15 years and it is my
    intention to develop them further," Ahmadinejad said during the
    ceremony.

    He said he hoped to increase cross-border cooperation in a range of
    fields, including electricity, energy, water and telecoms.

    Under a 20-year contract, Armenia is projected to receive 36 billion
    cubic metres of gas through the 150-kilometre (93-mile) pipeline,
    breaking Russian gas giant Gazprom's stranglehold on the ex-Soviet
    country's gas market.

    Armenia is initially to receive up to 400 million cubic metres of
    gas per year through the pipeline, but that amount is expected to
    eventually increase to 2.3 billion cubic metres per year.

    An agreement to build the 200-million-dollar (150-million-euro)
    pipeline was signed in 1992 but construction only began in 2004.

    Armenia funded its share of the pipeline with a 33-million-dollar
    loan from the Iranian Export and Development Bank.

    Armenia will pay for the gas with electricity it produces at a
    Soviet-era nuclear power plant.

    Landlocked Armenia has sought closer links with Iran because of an
    economic blockade imposed by neighbours Azerbaijan and Turkey over
    the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a six-year war ending with an uneasy
    ceasefire in 1994 over the majority ethnic-Armenian enclave in
    Azerbaijan.
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