Category Archives: Uncategorised

Kazakhstan’s Air Astana sighs codeshares

FEB. 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s flagship airline, Air Astana signed several codeshare agreements with international carriers to boost its image and offer new products to customers. From March 11, Air France/KLM customers will be able to book an Air Astana-operated flight from Astana to Paris. In a separate deal, Hong Kong Airlines also signed a codeshare agreement with Air Astana on its Hong Kong – Almaty flights. Air Astana now holds eight international codeshare agreements.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

Soldier pleads guilty in Armenia

JAN. 22 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Valery Permyakov, a Russian conscript soldier, pleaded guilty to assaulting and killing a family of seven in the Armenian town of Gyumri last year. The murders triggered anti-Russia protests outside Russia’s military base, its biggest in the South Caucasus, and threatened to damage bilateral relations.

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(News report from Issue No. 265, published on Jan. 29 2016)

LG pulls out of $4.2b project in Kazakhstan as crisis deepens

ALMATY, JAN. 26 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — South Korean industrial group LG Chem dropped its plan to build a $4.2b petrochemical complex in Kazakhstan, a major dent to the county’s economic outlook and perhaps the biggest project cancellation during this sustained period of low oil prices.

Under the project plans, drawn up in 2011, LG would have built two plants, to produce ethylene and polyethylene, near the town of Atyrau on the Caspian Sea shore.

“The Kazakhstan project lost its lustre because of a steep increase in facility investment amid growing uncertainty. On a business front, LG’s top management reached a consensus that it wasn’t promising,” the company said in a statement.

LG didn’t directly reference low oil prices, now at around a third of their level of 18 months ago, but the collapse would have made the plant far less profitable.

LG’s partners in Kazakhstan were state-owned United Chemical Company and privately-run SAT & Co, each holding a 25% stake in the Atyrau petrochemical project. Kenes Rakishev, son-in-law of defence minister Imangali Tasmagambetov, owns 75.6% of SAT.

LG Group controls various projects across Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan.

Low oil prices and recession in Russia have hit Central Asia hard, triggering project cancellations.

This also included an exploration project run by Petrovietnam, Vietnam’s state-owned energy company, which had been looking for hydrocarbon reserves in the Ustyurt region of Uzbekistan.

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(News report from Issue No. 265, published on  Jan. 29 2016)

Technip quits Azerbaijan

JAN. 22 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — French oil service company Technip Maritime Overseas quit Azerbaijan. It didn’t give an explanation about why it had quit Azerbaijan but the collapse in global oil prices could well be the root cause. The company, which has operated in Azerbaijan since 1993, maintains regional headquarters in Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. Last year it won a consulting contract with TAP, a gas pipeline that will bring gas from Azerbaijan to Italy.

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(News report from Issue No. 265, published on  Jan. 29 2016)

ICC investigates war crime in Georgia-Russia war

JAN. 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC) officially launched an investigation into alleged war crimes during an eight day war in August 2008 between Georgia and Russia. Georgia, a signatory of the treaty which set up the ICC, said it would comply with the investigation. The ICC’s investigation has the potential to damage recently improved Georgia- Russia relations.

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(News report from Issue No. 265, published on Jan. 29 2016)

 

Azerbaijan makes easy visa for Middle East

JAN. 26 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan has made it easier for citizens of Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Japan, China, South Korea, Malaysia, and Singapore to obtain visas by making them available on arrival at airports. Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry said the country wants to promote tourist visits and business relations. In 2010, Azerbaijan scrapped visas- on-arrival for most Western countries.

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(News report from Issue No. 265, published on Jan. 29 2016)

Helicopter crash kills 5 in southern Kazakhstan

JAN. 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – A helicopter carrying a sick child to hospital crashed in a canyon in southern Kazakhstan killing all five people aboard, media reported quoting the Kazakh emergency services. It was unclear what caused the crash. Kazakhstan has a poor safety record for helicopters. A few days earlier another two-person helicopter had also crashed in southern Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 265, published on Jan. 29 2016)

 

Critics say the Kyrgyz-Russian Fund is failing

BISHKEK, JAN. 26 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Businesses, company owners and lobby groups in Kyrgyzstan have criticised the Kyrgyz- Russian Investment Fund, launched with great fanfare in 2014 ahead of Kyrgyzstan’s entry into the Kremlin- led Eurasian Economic Union, as ineffective.

The criticism will sting as it comes after Russia withdrew support for a $2b hydropower project in Kyrgyzstan. It also underlines the Kremlin’s waning influence in Central Asia.

“The Kyrgyz-Russian Investment Fund does not have enough resources to keep the economy stable, as it cannot substitute a drop in remittances which used to come from Kyrgyz labour migrants in Russia and

revenues from re-exporting Chinese goods through Kyrgyzstan,” Uluk Kydyrbayev, head of the National Alliance of Business Associations lobby group, told The Bulletin.

An anti-crisis plan presented by the government on Jan. 26, which placed the Fund at its core, triggered an outpouring of frustration by businesses.

The Kyrgyz-Russian Investment Fund measures around $500m and was supposed to act as source of cheap credit for Kygyz businesses. At least some of this cash, though, has been used to bail-out mortgage holders who have seen their debts spiral with the devaluation of the som against the US dollar.

Like the rest of the region Kyrgyzstan is trying to navigate its way through a worsening economic crisis. One of the consequences is a fall in remittances from Russia.

Tilek Toktogaziyev, head of an organic food company, said that the Kyrgyz-Russian Fund had been a failure and had favoured big business over small business.

“The credits are only given to big companies who have break-even activities in past three years and have been present in the market for a long time,” he said.

He said the lowest credit the Fund gives is $3m. To win this loan, the company owner also has to make a contribution of 20%.

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(News report from Issue No. 265, published on Jan. 29 2016)

 

Zenith ramps up exploration in Azerbaijan

JAN. 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Toronto-listed Zenith Energy created a subsidiary called Zenith Aran Oil to explore three fields in central Azerbaijan. Current production is low, 350 barrels/day, but the company says the fields have a larger potential. Zenith said the decision to form a subsidiary is “indicative of both Zenith’s long term commitment to Azerbaijan and plans to exclusively focus on the recently acquired fields.”

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 265, published on  Jan. 29 2016)