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Armenia and Iran ink gas, gas pipeline agreement

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  • Armenia and Iran ink gas, gas pipeline agreement

    Armenia and Iran ink gas, gas pipeline agreement

    Interfax
    May 20 2004

    Yerevan. (Interfax) - Armenia and Iran signed an agreement on May
    13 on Iran providing Armenia with at least 1.1 billion cubic meters
    (bcm) of natural gas annually, and the two countries working to build
    a pipeline to be launched before January 1, 2007.

    Armenian Energy Minster Armen Movsisyan told the press afterwards
    that Armenia will pay for the Iranian gas with electricity.

    The tentative price tag on building the 41-km Armenian section of
    gas pipeline from Megri (near the border with Iran) to Kajaran will
    be $96- $100 million. Kajaran-Yerevan pipeline was built earlier and
    is ready for use.

    The cost of the roughly 100-km Iranian section is expected to be
    $120 million. Both parties will build their sections independently,
    Movsisyan said.

    He declined to identify financial sources for the Armenian section or
    how much the Iranian gas will cost, citing commercial confidentiality.

    Iranian Oil and Gas Minister Bijan Zanganeh was present for the
    signing, and he also declined to specify prices. He noted that the
    deal is for 20 years, during which Iran is to supply its neighbor
    with up to 36 bcm in exchange for electricity produced in Armenia.

    In 1995, the two countries signed an inter-governmental agreement
    laying out a route for a gas pipeline running 141 km overall, as well
    a gas price of $84 per 1,000 cubic meters. The project is estimated
    at $120 million, with the Armenian section costing $90-$100 million
    because of difficulties building pipeline through mountainous terrain.

    The idea is that Armenia will initially be receiving 700 million cubic
    meters of gas a year through the new pipeline, that increasing later
    to 1.5 bcm annually.

    Armenia and Iran have discussed building this pipeline since 1992.
    Russia, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, European countries and China have all
    expressed interest.
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