Tag Archives: electricity

Electricity prices to rise in Amenia

June 3 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Electricity prices in Armenia will increase, media quoted Robert Nazaryan, chairman of the Public Services Regulatory Commission, as saying, ending months of indecision. This will be the third electricity price rise in two years and triggered street protests.

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(News report from Issue No. 234, published on June 4 2015)

 

Kazakhstan to accept low-enriched uranium

JUNE 1 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan will start to take shipments of low-grade enriched uranium from 2017, Timur Zhantikin, an official in the Kazakh energy ministry said, two years after original hoped-for start date.

Uranium has been an important part of Kazakhstan’s post-Soviet story. When it became independent from the Soviet Union in 1991, Kazakhstan inherited a batch of nuclear weapons. Rather than selling them, abandoning them or hoarding them, Kazakhstan turned the nuclear weapons over to the US to be deposed of safely, winning plaudits around the world.

Since then, eager to win the Nobel Peace Prize, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev has promoted Kazakhstan as a leader in nuclear-disarmament.

Now it has struck a deal with the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the world’s nuclear watchdog, to host a bank of low grade enriched uranium.

Countries can apply for enriched uranium if projects have been approved for peaceful purposes.

The two year delay in setting up the nuclear bank is only a minor nuisance. It should still be a boon to Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 234, published on June 4 2015)

 

Turkey invests in Georgian hydropower

JUNE 3 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – A Turkish infrastructure company has agreed to fund construction of a new hydro- power dam in Georgia, media reported.

The agreement boosts Georgia- Turkey relations and will also strengthen electricity generation in the country.

Anadolu Tasit Ticaret will spend $80m on building the 51-megawatt Khedula-3 hydro- power plant in the Svaneti region in the Caucasus mountains.

Georgia’s government is a major proponent of developing hydropower and energy minister Kakha Kaladze said that this new development was just part of an ongoing process to boost the sector.

“This is being done for our people and for our country. This is being done for Georgia to be an energy independent country, he said. But it’s not without its controversies.

Hydropower currently produces around 85% of Georgia’s power but with economic and industrial development demand rising, so is demand for power. The tension lies between those who want to develop hydropower, which often means smashing through pristine mountain valleys and destroying villages, and those who want to protect the environment.

The government is still to make a final decision about one of the most controversial hydro- power projects in Georgia, the proposed 200m high dam at Khudoni.

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(News report from Issue No. 234, published on June 4 2015)

 

Turkmenistan to increase electricity exports

MAY 29 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan has agreed to increase the amount of electricity it supplies to Afghanistan by four times over the next five years, media reported quoting senior officials. Turkmenistan has become an increasingly important regional power and energy supplier.

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(News report from Issue No. 234, published on June 4 2015)

 

Tajik electricity deal signed with EBRD

MAY 18 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has signed a deal with the Tajik government to help it update and modernise its power network. The agreement is part of general modernisation linked to the CASA-1000 deal that will see Tajikistan export electricity to Pakistan.

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(News report from Issue No. 232, published on May 20 2015)

Uzbekistan launches metering project

MAY 11 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – KT, the second largest South Korean mobile network, said that it had won a $110m contract to build an advanced electricity metering system. The project is in partnership with the Asian Development Bank. The plan is to install 1m metres in Uzbekistan’s three biggest cities by 2017.

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(News report from Issue No. 231, published on May 13 2015)

ABD and Azerbaijan invest in power grid

MAY 6 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) and Azerbaijan have signed a Memorandum of Understanding worth $1b to modernise the country’s power distribution network, media reported. The ADB will give three tranches of $250m, totalling $750m, and Azerbaijan will provide the final $250m.

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(News report from Issue No. 230, published on May 6 2015)

 

Uzbek power price rise

MAY 6 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Uzbekistan has increased the price of electricity it charges its citizens by 7.4%, media reported, the second price rise in the last six months. Prices for basic utilities in Uzbekistan have been rising steadily.

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(News report from Issue No. 230, published on May 6 2015)

 

Tajikistan signs CASA-1000 deal

APRIL 27 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – At a ceremony in Istanbul, Tajik, Pakistani and Afghan officials signed a deal that will mean electricity generated in Tajikistan’s Pamir Mountains will power households in Islamabad.

The CASA-1000 project should generate income for Dushanbe from its hydro-stations and for Kabul as a transit country while plugging a shortfall in electricity in Pakistan.

As well as an economic success, the $1.2b project is seen as a diplomatic highlight by the United States which is keen to involve Central Asian countries in trade deals with Pakistan and Afghanistan. It sees this as a way to foster stability once it withdraws its forces.

Richard Hoagland, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Central Asia, said: “We’ve already seen the efficacy of such an approach in the successes of the CASA-1000 energy project, which brought together a grouping of countries that had never before worked together on a development project.”

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(News report from Issue No. 229, published on April 29 2015)

 

Kyrgyzstan wants to build more hydropower stations

APRIL 6 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan plans to tackle a lack of electricity by building small hydropower plants in different parts of the country over the next few years, media quoted industry minister Batyrkul Baetov as saying. One of Kyrgyzstan’s few natural resources is water.
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(News report from Issue No. 226, published on April 8 2015)