Tag Archives: business

Electricity prices increase in Azerbaijan

JULY 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijan’s government said that it is considering an increase in electricity prices for households of 16.7%, local media reported. The price will increase from 0.06 manat to 0.07 manat/kWh. This is the first price increase since 2007. Domestic electricity prices in the South Caucasus are sensitive. People in Armenia and Georgia have demonstrated against tariff increases over the past few years.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Azerbaijan’s energy company says Greek gas network deal may collapse

JULY 20 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A deal for Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR to lead a €400m takeover of Greece’s gas pipeline network DESFA could collapse after the Greek government agreed a lower-than-expected domestic gas price rise.

Anar Mammadov, CEO of SOCAR’s Greek subsidiary, said after a meeting with Panos Skourletis, Greece’s energy minister that the gas price increase undermined DESFA’s profitability.

“If implemented, those changes would reduce the value of the company and its future profitability

dramatically,” he told media. “The only thing I can say right now is that I can’t see how the tender could be salvaged if those changes are implemented as planned.”

The Greek parliament still has to approve the price rise for it to be implemented.

In 2013, SOCAR won a bid to buy 66% of DESFA, Greece’s gas distributor. The deal was later frozen by the European Commission, citing the so-called Third Energy Package, a 2009 regulation designed to counter vertical integration between gas suppliers and distributors.

In recent months, though, Italy’s Snam has come forward as a potential partner for SOCAR. Snam would buy 17% and SOCAR would take 49%, which mean the takeover complies with the EU’s requirements.

Buying DESFA is important to Azerbaijan because Greece will play a major role hosting part of a pipeline network that will pump gas from the Caspian Sea to Europe.

The EU has called this new pipeline network a vital strategic goal to reduce its reliance on gas supplies from Russia with which it has had increasingly strained relations.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

 

Kazakh energy company spat worsens

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In an increasingly vicious argument, Kazakhstan’s state-owned energy company Kazmunaigas accused independent directors of its London-traded upstream subsidiary KMG EP, of misrepresenting its position over a buy-out scheme it was trying to promote. Kazmunaigas’ letter, published by Kazakhstan’s stock exchange, said that its purchase offer for KMG EP’s GDRs still stands and that the independent directors had overesti- mated KMG EP’s operational performance.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Azerbaijan’s Gilan Holding to construct Baku tower

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijan’s construction company Gilan Holding picked Switzerland- based Liebherr as the provider of cranes for a skyscraper complex to be built in Baku. Gilan’s project for The Crescent Bay, will include a hotel, a shopping mall and a residential unit and is one of the biggest real estate projects currently planned in Azerbaijan.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Turkmenistan reorganises its oil and gas ministry

JULY 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In a move that took observers by surprise, Turkmenistan abolished its oil and gas ministry which had, officially, run the most profitable economic sector in the country, part of a wider structural reform of the government.

At a cabinet meeting, President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov justified the move as an effort to improve management and governance systems n the energy sector.

Turkmenistan is considered an important stakeholder in the world’s energy nexus, and the move shook analysts. It holds the fourth-largest gas reserves in the world and exports gas mostly to China via pipeline. For over a decade, European and US lobby groups have pushed for a Trans-Caspian Pipeline to pump Turkmen gas to Europe. Turkmenistan is also building TAPI, a gas pipeline to export gas to India, via Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Simon Pirani, senior research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, said that aside from internal causes, which are hard to guess, a range of external factors could have played in Turkmenistan’s decision to reorganise its hydrocarbon sector.

“The continuing relationship with China, despite lower off-take of gas than Turkmen officials had hoped, the improved ties with Iran and the quite bad relationship with Russia could all be relevant factors,” he told The Conway Bulletin.

The change, however, is unlikely to shift the way that Turkmenistan does business, a system that revolves around the whims and decisions of President Berdymukhamedov.

“Companies and international organisations are aware that Turkmenistan is a centralised system,” Mr Pirani said.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Armenia’s power company to invest in rebuilding

JULY 21 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Armenia’s power generation company Hydro Corporation said it will invest 8.9b drams ($4.2) to rebuild its small hydropower station on the Argichi river in the east of the country. The hydropower station was built in 2013 and financed through a loan from Germany’s development bank KfW.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Loans in Kazakh banks shrink

JULY 18 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The proportion of overdue loans held by Kazakh banks in their combined portfolio shrank from 22.8% to 8.6% at the end of May 2016, compared to a year earlier, Central Bank data showed. The main reason behind the sharp decrease, though, is that Kazkommertsbank, Kazakhstan’s biggest lender, wrote off most of its bad debt.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Kazakhstan’s Air Astana reports loss

JULY 20 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s flagship company Air Astana reported a loss of $6.6m in H1 2016, compared to a $8.3m profit in the same period last year. Importantly, passenger numbers decreased by 7% to 1.7m. Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth fund Samruk-Kazyna (51%) and Britain’s BAE Systems (49%) own Air Astana.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Kazakh minister of economy receives new roles

JULY 11 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In his capacity as head of the Baiterek state holding, Yerbolat Dossayev, former Kazakh minister of economy, was named chairman of Zhilstroisberbank, a top-15 bank in Kazakhstan and subsidiary of Baiterek. A few days later Mr Dossayev was also named head of KazExportGarant, an export credit agency, and chairman of Kazakhstan’s Investment Fund, which are both managed by Baiterek.

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(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)

 

Uzbekistan to double fruit and vegetable production

JULY 12 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Uzbek PM Shavkat Mirziyoyev said that Uzbekistan aims to double production of fruits and vegetables by the end of 2020. Mr Mirziyoyev said that the country currently produces around 16m tonnes of produce and the government aims to boost output to at least 32m tonnes in the next three years. A word of caution, however. Statistics in Uzbekistan can be easily manipulated for political reasons.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)