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Soaring Trade Boosts Russian-Armenian Economic Ties

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  • Soaring Trade Boosts Russian-Armenian Economic Ties

    SOARING TRADE BOOSTS RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN ECONOMIC TIES
    By Emil Danielyan

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Oct 30 2007

    Armenia's trade with Russia has increased dramatically this year,
    paralleling the growing Russian economic presence in the country,
    which has sparked concerns about Armenia's economic independence
    and even national security. The almost 62% year-on-year rise in
    Russian-Armenian trade registered in the first eight months of 2007
    comes despite Russia's continuing transport blockade of Georgia,
    Armenia's main commercial conduit to the outside world.

    According to the most recent data posted by Armenia's National
    Statistical Service (NSS) on its website, www.armstat.am, the volume
    of bilateral trade totaled $404 million in January-August 2007, up
    from $250 million registered during the same period last year. Much
    of the gain resulted from an almost 100% surge in Armenian exports
    to Russia, most of them alcoholic beverages and prepared foodstuffs.

    Even so, Armenian imports of Russian commodities and goods (notably
    natural gas) continued to account for most of the bilateral commercial
    exchange, rising by 50% to about $280 million.

    Consequently, Russia saw its share in Armenia's external trade
    grow from 13.1% to 15.2%, solidifying its status as the South
    Caucasus state's single largest trading partner. The NSS reported
    similarly strong gains in Armenia's trade with Georgia, Ukraine,
    and Kazakhstan. As a result, the share of non-Baltic former Soviet
    republics in its trade reached 32.6%, up from 28.4% recorded in
    January-August 2006. The European Union, by comparison, accounted
    for 38.2% of the January-August 2007 turnover.

    Officials in Moscow and Yerevan have welcomed the growing commercial
    ties between their countries, which they say will reach a new high of
    $700 million in the full year 2007. Speaking after talks in Moscow on
    September 25, the Russian and Armenian prime ministers said they would
    try to ensure that Russian-Armenian trade hits $1 billion next year
    (Armenian Public Television, September 25). Armenian Prime Minister
    Serge Sarkisian instructed his ministers to closely work with their
    Russian counterparts to meet this target (Statement by the Armenian
    government, September 27). Nikolai Ryzhkov, a Russian lawmaker
    co-chairing a Russian-Armenian inter-parliamentary commission, came
    up with a more conservative estimate during a mid-October visit to
    Yerevan, predicting bilateral trade will likely pass $1 billion mark
    only in 2009 (Interfax, October 19).

    Russia-Armenian trade is growing strongly despite Russia's decision
    in June 2006 to close its main border crossing with Georgia. Moscow
    cited the need to conduct repairs on Russian border guard and customs
    facilities. The move, whatever its real motives, hit hard Armenian
    companies that heavily relied on the Upper Lars crossing in shipping
    goods to Russia and other parts of the former Soviet Union. Armenian
    government officials and lawmakers have since been lobbying their
    Russian counterparts to reopen Upper Lars. According the Armenian
    ambassador in Moscow, Armen Smbatian, the Russians have promised to
    do that some time in 2008 (RFE/RL Armenia Report, September 28).

    Armenian exporters, meanwhile, appear to have quickly adapted to the
    new situation through an even greater reliance on a rail-ferry link
    between the Georgian Black Sea port of Poti and Ukraine's Ilyichevsk.

    A similar ferry service, designed to primarily cater to Armenia,
    was launched in April 2007 between Poti and the Russian port of
    Port-Kavkaz. However, the service has yet to become regular and
    frequent enough to process substantial amounts of freight. Sarkisian
    reportedly raised the issue with his Russian counterpart, Viktor
    Zubkov, during their Moscow meeting.

    Zubkov told journalists after the talks that Russian companies would
    invest $1.5 billion in Armenia "in the near future." He gave no
    details, saying only that much of those investments will be channeled
    into the construction of an oil refinery in southeastern Armenia
    that will process crude from neighboring Iran. The ambitious project
    featured prominently during Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's
    October 22 visit to Armenia. Speaking at a joint news conference
    with Ahmadinejad, Armenian President Robert Kocharian said Yerevan
    and Tehran agreed to press ahead with the project's implementation.

    Another top Russian official, Transport Minister Igor Levitin, said
    in Yerevan on September 14 that Russian investments in the Armenian
    economy will reach a record-high level of $500 million in 2007 (Azg,
    September 15). He did not specify whether the figure includes $430
    million that the Russian telecommunications operator MTS paid to
    purchase Armenia's largest mobile phone network, VivaCell, from a
    Lebanese-owned firm. The deal, officially announced in Yerevan on
    September 14, came almost a year after the $500 million acquisition
    of Armenia's national telephone company and its wireless network by
    another Russian telecom operator, Vimpelcom.

    The Armenian government is believed to have played a key role in both
    takeovers that left another sector of Armenia's economy under Russian
    ownership. It has also been instrumental in Russian control of the
    Armenian energy sector. That control has become near total since the
    signing of a controversial April 2006 agreement that enabled Armenia
    to avoid a doubling of the price of Russian gas until January 2009
    in return for handing over more energy assets to Russia. It was
    officially confirmed on September 12 that those assets include the
    entire Armenian section of an under-construction gas pipeline from
    Iran (Haykakan Zhamanak, September 13). It will now be owned by the
    Armenian national gas company in which Russia's Gazprom conglomerate
    has a controlling stake.

    The tightening of Russia's economic grip on Armenia is widely
    attributed to Kocharian's and his preferred successor Sarkisian's
    obvious desire to ensure the Kremlin's continued support for their
    regime. The two men, who single-handedly make all key decisions
    affecting the nation, are poised to cede more industries to Russian
    companies ahead of next spring's Armenian presidential election.

    Those include Armenia's rail network and largest gold mining company.
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