Ahmadinejad to open first stretch of Armenian gas pipeline from Iran

Ahmadinejad to open first stretch of Armenian gas pipeline from Iran
AP Worldstream Published: Mar 19, 2007

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Armenian counterpart on
Monday are to formally open the first stretch in Armenia of a natural
gas pipeline.

Ahmadinejad and Armenian President Robert Kocharian are to open the
40-kilometer (25-mile) section in the town of Meghri, just over the
border from Iran. Under the first stage of the project, Iran is to
deliver up to 400 million cubic meters (14 billion cubic feet) of gas
a year; when the pipeline is completed and extends to the capital,
Yerevan, the volume could rise to 2.5 billion cubic meters (88 billion
cubic feet) a year.

The project was launched in 2004 after more than a decade of
negotiations.

Russia, which supplies most of Armenia’s gas, had objected to the
project. Armenian officials said last year they were discussing the
prospect of Russia’s natural-gas monopoly Gazprom purchasing the
Armenian section of the pipeline from Iran.

Landlocked Armenia has developed its relations with Iran amid economic
troubles caused the closing of its borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan
in the wake of the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of
Azerbaijan occupied by Armenian and ethnic Armenian Karabakhi forces.

Iran also has sought projects and influence in other parts of the
former Soviet Union, mostly in Central Asia.

Last year, Ahmadinejad opened an Iranian-financed tunnel improving
connections between impoverished Tajikistan’s north and the capital
region. Tehran has focused mostly on transport and infrastructure
projects and restoring historically close cultural ties.