Russian Energy Giant Sells Armenian Power Plants
Monday, December 9, 2019A state-run Russian corporation, RusHydro, has sold Armenia’s second most important hydroelectric complex to the Tashir Group of Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetian.
The deal announced late on Thursday leaves only one Kremlin-controlled company, Gazprom, owning major assets in the Armenian energy sector.
In a statement, RusHydro said a Tashir subsidiary paid 173 million rubles ($2.7 million) and assumed $55 million in debt owed by the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade to buy the loss-making facility generating up to 10 percent of Armenia’s electricity. It said that the deal was approved by Armenian public utility regulators.
Tashir confirmed the signing of the deal and its financial terms in a separate press release. A photograph released by RusHydro showed that Karapetian was present at the signing ceremony in Moscow.
The Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade consists of seven hydroelectric plants built in Soviet times along the Hrazdan river flowing through central Armenia. The former Armenian government handed it over to Russia in 2003 in payment for the Metsamor nuclear plant’s massive debts to Russian nuclear fuel suppliers.
RusHydro acquired the hydroelectric complex from another state-run Russian firm in 2011. The energy giant, which operates most of Russia’s hydroelectric plants, reportedly decided to sell it four years later.
According to the Moscow daily “Kommersant,” continuing heavy losses incurred by RusHydro’s Armenian subsidiary were the main reason for its sale. The company posted a net loss of $13 million in 2018 alone.
Another Russian energy conglomerate, Inter RAO, pulled out of Armenia in 2015 for the same reason. It sold the country’s debt-ridden electricity distribution network and oldest thermal power plant to Karapetian’s Tashir. The new owner appears to have succeeded in significantly reducing the network’s losses.