TBILISI, SEPT. 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Georgian-Iranian company GEOPARS signed a deal with the Georgian government to build an oil refinery in Supsa on the Black Sea coast, the first to be built in Georgia for 80 years.
According to local media, the government licensed the land to GEOPARS for free. GEOPARS said it would need to make an investment of $1.5b to build the refinery, a petro- chemical plant and a logistical centre.
PM Giorgi Kvirikashvili attended the signing ceremony and hailed its impact on Georgia’s industrial sector.
“We will see a project that once again accentuates and reinforces Georgia’s regional role as the shortest route to Europe for Near East and Asian countries. This is a project that puts Georgia on a map by highlighting not only its transit function, but its industrial role as well,” local media quoted him as saying.
Caution is needed, though. Georgia has negotiated building an oil refinery in Supsa or Poti several times previously with Azerbaijani, Kazakh and Russian investors but the deals eventually fell through.
SOCAR Georgia Investments, a subsidiary of Azerbaijan’s state owned energy company SOCAR, had proposed building a refinery in Supsa in May, but failed to commit funds.
This is the first refinery deal in Georgia made with Iran, which has played an increasingly active role in the South Caucasus over the past few years. If the project does go ahead, it will give Iran an important foothold in Georgia, a close US ally.
The only major oil refinery previously built in Georgia was at Batumi in the 1930s. The Batumi refinery was downgraded in the 1990s and sold to Kazakh investors. It later became an oil terminal.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 298, published on Sept. 30 2016)