Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian, Russian Companies Ink New Agreements

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian, Russian Companies Ink New Agreements

    ARMENIAN, RUSSIAN COMPANIES INK NEW AGREEMENTS

    ARMENPRESS
    September 14

    YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 14, ARMENPRESS: Russia's transport minister Igor
    Levitin said today in Yerevan that Russian-Armenian trade grows
    annually 70 percent and Russian investments in Armenia will reach
    $500 million by the end of this year.

    Igor Levitin is the Russian cochairman of the bilateral
    inter-governmental commission on economic cooperation. He was heading
    a Russian delegation that came here for a recurrent meeting of the
    commission.

    The Russian minister said his country's relations with Armenia are
    based on partnership, "which is backed up, particularly, by friendly
    relations between top officials on both sides."

    "Russian business trusts Armenian authorities and this amount of
    investments is not the limit," he said, adding that by next meeting
    of the commission the volume of Russian investments in Armenia
    will increase drastically as Russia plans a set of big investments
    projects here.

    The Armenian cochairman of the commission, prime minister Serzh
    Sarkisian, attributed the growth in Russian investments to 'a regular
    dialogue between Russian and Armenian presidents."

    Before to wrap up the session Serzh Sarkisian and Igor Levitin signed a
    plan of long-term actions designed to boost bilateral cooperation. The
    next session will be held in 2008 September in Moscow.

    Also Mikhail Baghdasarov, the owner of Armenia's biggest Armavia
    carrier and Mikhail Poghosian, director of Russian Sukhoi Civil
    Aircrafts company, signed an agreement whereby the Russian company
    will sell five Sukhoi Superjet 100 aircrafts to Armenia.

    Armavia also signed another agreement with Russian VTB bank to get
    a credit for buying the aircrafts. A Sukhoi Superjet 100 aircraft
    costs $50-$60 million.
Working...
X