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  • Russia cements control of Armenia's energy system

    RUSSIA CEMENTS CONTROL OF ARMENIA'S ENERGY SYSTEM
    By Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Nov 3 2006

    Friday, November 3, 2006

    President Robert Kocharian President Robert Kocharian's October
    30-November 1 working visit to the Kremlin sealed arrangements to
    deepen Russian control of Armenia's gas and electricity supply systems.

    Under these arrangements, Gazprom is de facto taking over the
    Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, even as Tehran and Yerevan are about to
    complete the pipeline's construction under an earlier bilateral
    agreement. Moreover, Gazprom has now raised its stake in the
    Russian-Armenian company ArmRosGazprom from 45% to 58% by approving
    an additional issue of shares worth $119 million. That amount is to
    cover the acquisition of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline and of the
    Hrazdan electricity generating plant's fifth power bloc (Hrazdan-5),
    the leading unit in the country, by ArmRosGazprom.

    The Armenian government's stake in ArmRosGazprom, hitherto 45%,
    is said to decline correspondingly to Gazprom's increase, thus
    apparently leaving Armenia with 32%. Gazprom's old offshoot Itera
    owns the remaining 10%.

    The basis for these Armenian handovers had been laid in March-April
    of this year as part of a deal for low-priced Russian gas. Under the
    supply agreement signed in April, Gazprom raised the price of gas to
    Armenia from the traditional, "fraternal" $54 to a still preferential
    $110 per 1,000 cubic meters, which is to remain in force until January
    1, 2009. In return for this short-term relief, official Yerevan seems
    content to accept the long-term monopolization of Armenia's energy
    systems by Russian interests.

    Armenia had earlier attempted to diversify energy supply sources
    and infrastructure away from full Russian control. The Iran-Armenia
    agreement, signed in May 2004, envisaged the construction of a gas
    pipeline from the joint border to Yerevan and potentially to the
    Armenia-Georgia border, as well as the completion of the Hrazdan-5
    power bloc, with mainly Iranian funding. Armenia was to consume most
    of the electricity generated with Iranian gas at Hrazdan and also to
    use part of that electricity to repay Iran during the first years of
    the 20-year project. Hrazdan-5 is due to be completed in mid-2008 at
    a cost of $180 million.

    >>From the start of the project, official Yerevan accepted Moscow's
    demand to limit the Iran-Armenia pipeline's diameter to 700
    millimeters, instead of the 1,420 millimeters in the original design.

    Thus, Moscow and its allies in Yerevan precluded the possibility
    of this pipeline being used for transit of Iranian gas via Armenia
    to Georgia and potentially to Ukraine via the Black Sea. Last year,
    the Ukrainian government of Yulia Tymoshenko showed keen interest in
    an Armenian transit route for Iranian gas. However, this pipeline,
    with an initial capacity 300 to 400 million cubic meters per year,
    can only meet the needs of a part of Armenia's internal market. The
    Iranian-Armenian project had envisaged 1.1 billion cubic meters
    annually in the first stage

    The pipeline's 40 kilometer first section, from Kajaran on the
    Iran-Armenia border to Meghri, is set to be commissioned on schedule
    at the end of December. The second section is planned to reach
    Armenia's Ararat district, there to connect with the existing gas
    supply system under ArmRosGazprom. Thus, instead of a jointly owned
    Iranian-Armenian pipeline dedicated to Iranian gas, the new line
    becomes a Gazprom-controlled link from Iran to the Gazprom-controlled
    pipeline system within Armenia. As one Yerevan commentator noted when
    the outline of the deal emerged, "The pipeline goes to ArmRosGaz in
    appearance only. In reality, the pipeline is packaged in ArmRosGaz
    and given to Gazprom" (Lragir, October 27).

    Attempting to rationalize this decision, Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian argues that separate ownership of the Iran-Armenia supply
    pipeline would be "illogical," since Gazprom already controls Armenia's
    gas transport and distribution systems, thereby controlling also
    the access of Iranian gas to Armenian consumers. European countries
    consenting to monopolistic long-term contracts with Gazprom might look
    at the situation described by Markarian as a harbinger for their own
    countries, if that trend persists.

    Armenia's gas market is small and not lucrative for Russia.

    ArmRosGazprom expects only $3.75 million in profits in 2006,
    partly because tariffs to household consumers in Armenia are
    state-controlled. However, Moscow wants to control for Armenia's gas
    market for geopolitical reasons. Such control enables it to foreclose
    a possible route for Iranian or Turkmen gas via Armenia to Georgia,
    Ukraine, and potentially European Union territory, where such gas
    could compete with and indeed out compete Gazprom's.

    With Iran supplying part of Armenia's needs, Russia can redirect
    corresponding volumes of Russian gas to Europe at more than double
    the price it charges to Armenia. At the same time, Gazprom retains
    discretionary control of the Armenian gas market through control of
    the distribution system in the country.

    (Noyan Tapan, Mediamax, Armenpress, October 29-November 2; RFE/RL
    Armenia Report, October 31)
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