YEREVAN (RFE/RL) — The United States considers the latest acquisition of Armenia’s main cascade of hydroelectric plants by an American company to be important for the South Caucasus nation’s energy diversity and independence.
Speaking at a news briefing in Yerevan on Friday, U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Heffern stressed that the takeover agreement signed with the Armenian government on January 29, under which the New York-based group ContourGlobal is to pay $180 million and invest $70 million in the three plants making up the Vorotan Hydro Cascade, represents the single largest U.S. investment in the Armenian economy to date.
The deal also marked a first-ever multimillion-dollar Western investment in Armenia’s energy sector dominated by Gazprom and other Russian energy companies.
“Every country needs energy diversity and energy independence, and that’s a very important thing for the U.S. and Armenia both,” Heffern said.
United Nations energy expert Ara Marjanian believes the Vorotan Cascade deal will give a little more balance to the situation in Armenia’s energy sector and contribute to its diversification, which meets Armenia’s interests.
“It is also reassuring that the American side plans certain investments, which means modernization or perhaps even eastward expansion of the Vorotan Cascade in the future. An American partner comes to Armenia’s energy, finance and business market, which will bring in, to say so, a little more cultural diversity in our field, will make it work more efficiently, more transparently and more decisively,” Marjanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).
Armenia’s Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Armen Movsisian thinks that the conclusion of the deal means that Western countries consider the Armenian economy to be quite attractive and, therefore, they invest in the country’s energy sector.
“Besides the acquisition, the agreement implies quite serious investments in the Vorotan Cascade for its modernization and prolongation of its life. The age of the cascade is approaching 40 and it is quite an old age for such a facility. So, it needs modernizing that requires large investments,” the minister said.