Armenia will build a second highway leading to Iran which will allow for a sizable increase in cargo traffic between the two neighboring countries
Published:
23 February 2005 y., Wednesday
Armenia will build a second highway leading to Iran which will allow for a sizable increase in cargo traffic between the two neighboring countries, President Robert Kocharian’s office announced Tuesday.
A statement by the presidential press service said work on the new road will start in April and finish next year. It said the Armenian government will spend 6.6 billion drams ($14 million) for that purpose this year.
Details of the project were discussed on Tuesday by Kocharian and Transport and Communications Minister Andranik Manukian. A photograph released by the press service showed the two men leaning over what looked like a map of Armenia’s southeastern Syunik region bordering Iran.
“President Robert Kocharian instructed the minister of transport and communications to keep the construction under daily control, emphasizing that it must be built properly and on time,” the statement said.
The new road will stretch from Syunik’s administrative capital Kapan to Meghri, a small town on the Iranian border. The two towns are already connected by a 50-kilometer highway than runs through the Kajaran mountain pass, the highest in Armenia. It is narrow and often impassable in winter months, complicating Armenian-Iranian trade.
Kocharian’s office said the maximum capacity of heavy trucks traveling along the existing Kapan-Meghri highway is 36 tons. The new road would raise to it 80 tons, it added.
Government sources told RFE/RL that the project discussed by Kocharian and Manukian is a much cheaper alternative to the idea of building a tunnel under the Kajaran pass which has long been discussed by the Armenian and Iranian governments. The tunnel is estimated to cost at least $30 million.
Šaltinis:
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
In its first meeting in 2010, the Gas Coordination Group, under the chairmanship of the Commission, has focused today on the assessment of the situation on security of gas supply in the EU-27 and countries of the Energy Community and discussed priorities for the work of the Group in 2010.
more »
Luc Van den Brande, President of the EU Committee of the Regions (CoR), has used his first meeting with the President of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, to underline the importance of consultation between local, regional and national authorities.
more »
Basile Nkwesi, Directeur Commercial of Multiprint, speaks for dozens of frustrated business managers in this busy enterprise center when he talks about Cameroon’s costly and unreliable electricity.
more »
During 2009, over 2400 new corporate clients, whose total number currently exceeds 16 thousand, began using Bank SNORAS services.
more »
In 2009, the European Investment Bank (EIB) provided EUR 2.5 billion in 16 credit lines for financing the investment projects of SMEs (EUR 1 955 million) and local authorities (545 million) in Spain.
more »
In 2009, the number of counterfeit euro coins removed from circulation was 172 100, down from 195 900 the year before.
more »
Haiti began participating in the International Monetary Fund’s General Data Dissemination System on December 28, 2009, marking a major step forward in the development of its statistical system.
more »
According to the data of NASDAQ OMX Vilnius Stock Exchange, the price of Bank SNORAS registered ordinary shares grew by more than 2.5 times.
more »
The European Commission has cleared under the EU Merger Regulation the proposed acquisition of Cadbury PLC of the UK by Kraft Foods Inc. of the US by way of public offer.
more »
Statistics Lithuania informs that construction input prices inNovember 2009, against October, dropped by 0.5 percent.
more »