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BAKU: Armenia Says Will Sell Electric Power To Turkey

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  • BAKU: Armenia Says Will Sell Electric Power To Turkey

    ARMENIA SAYS WILL SELL ELECTRIC POWER TO TURKEY

    Assa-Irada
    Sept 10 2008
    Azerbaijan

    Armenia will start selling electric power to Turkey in 2009, its
    energy minister Armen Movsisyan said in an unexpected statement
    on Wednesday. A relevant agreement was reached during Turkish
    President Abdullah Guls visit to Yerevan at the weekend, Armenian
    media reported. According to Movsisyan, representatives of the UNIT
    company operating in Turkey in the field of imports and distribution of
    high-voltage electric power were part of the delegation that visited
    the Armenian capital.

    He said the two countries had signed a contract on exports of
    electricity from Armenia to Turkey through the city of Gars. Under
    the deal, Turkey is to restore all the required infrastructure in its
    territory and begin receiving electric power afterwards. According
    to the minister, the neighboring country will initially receive 1.5
    billion KWt/hr a year, with the figure to reach 3.5 billion KWt/hr in
    the following years. Touching on the price of supplied electricity,
    Movsisyan said: The price per KWt will depend on the cost of thermal
    power and gas, but the price will be economically viable in any
    case. If the exports were carried out today, a KWt/hr would cost
    5.7 cents. Movsisyan said the alleged agreement was a success for
    Armenia. This is a new market for us, and this arrangement will
    allow us to maximally capitalize on our energy potential. Movsisyan
    added that the agreement had been reached on a high level, adding
    that the emergence of political hurdles was unlikely. Abdullah Gul
    became the first Turkish leader to visit Armenia. The neighboring
    countries have no diplomatic ties but, rather, a relationship haunted
    by the question of whether huge numbers of ethnic Armenians were
    killed by Ottoman Turks during World War I in what Yerevan claims
    was systematic genocide. Ankara also condemns Armenias policy of
    occupying Azerbaijani land.
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