Russian hydroelectric project strengthens bond with Kyrgyzstan

A project to build four hydroelectric power stations will extend the Kremlin's footprint in Kyrgyzstan. Kyrgyz officials welcome the investment, which could boost their economy.

Men fish as a barge is transported in a shiplift at the Krasnoyarsk hydroelectric power station and dam, about 28 miles south of the city of Krasnoyarsk September 22. Russia is investing in four hydroelectric power stations in Kyrgyzstan.

Ilya Naymushin/Reuters

October 27, 2012

Kyrgyzstan's leader welcomed growing Russian investment in his impoverished nation on Saturday in a ceremony to kick off the construction of four Russian-built hydroelectric power stations.

The power project extends the Kremlin's footprint in the volatile fringes of the former Soviet Union, following Russia's agreement to write off nearly $500 million in Kyrgyz debts.

Russian state-controlled hydroelectric power producer RusHydro will build the four plants by 2016. The deal was agreed in September after Kyrgyzstan extended a lease on a Russian military base and confirmed plans to close a U.S. military base used to fly troops in and out of Afghanistan.

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"Today we witness a historic event in the upper reaches of the Naryn River -- for the first time since the fall of the great Soviet Union, we lay the foundation not of just a single hydropower plant, but of an entire cascade of stations," Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev said at a ground-breaking ceremony.

"Great Russia supports us," he said to the applause of Kyrgyz officials, top RusHydro managers and local residents in the mountain-rimmed Naryn River valley.

Twenty-one years after the demise of the Soviet UnionKyrgyzstan, a mainly Muslim Central Asian nation, remains one of the poorest of the 15 former Soviet republics despite its abundant hydropower potential and other natural resources.

The country, where two presidents have been toppled in violent revolts since 2005 and per capita GDP is less than a tenth of that in next-door Kazakhstan, badly needs foreign investment to alleviate poverty that stokes instability.

The cascades of hydropower stations will have a combined annual capacity of 1.055 million kilowatt-hours. Kyrgyz officials say the construction of the first one will begin next spring.

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The plants will cost between $410 million and $425 million and will be financed on a parity basis by Kyrgyzstanand RusHydro, which would also manage 25 percent of the plants' capacity until they turn profitable.

The project, initially conceived in the Soviet era, is expected to be the first of several major energy projects set to strengthen Russia's hold in the strategic nation bordering China and lying on a drug trafficking route out ofAfghanistan.

"By 2016, all these four stations will have been built and we will start building another eight plants (in this area)," Atambayev said, but gave no details.

In a sparsely populated valley some 400 km southeast of the capital, Bishkek, Atambayev put a metal capsule with a message to future generations into the foundations of the first hydropower station. RusHydro Chairman Evgeny Dod took off his wrist watch and cemented it with the capsule.

The Kyrgyz president, who enjoys warm relations with President Vladimir Putin, clinched the deal during the Russian leader's visit to Bishkek last month.

"Today is a significant day in Kyrgyzstan's ties with this brotherly country (Russia)," said Atambayev. "I would like to specially thank Russian President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin for his support of this project, his political will and wisdom."

With the deal, Russia also acquires the role of mediator in Kyrgyzstan's dispute with its much bigger neighbourUzbekistan over water use.

Uzbekistan, which lies downstream, depends on the rivers that rise in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to irrigate farmland.

Uzbek leader Islam Karimov last month criticised plans by its neighbours to revive other projects, conceived in Soviet days but still unbuilt, to dam rivers and build hydropower stations -- the Kambarata-1 in Kyrgyzstan and theRogun plant in Tajikistan.

Karimov said the unresolved dispute over Central Asia's water resources risked provoking military conflict in the region.

"I believe that when we display all the facts and documents proving that the Kambarata-1 plant would primarily benefit the downstream nations, this issue will be removed," Atambayev said, inviting Uzbekistan to eventually take part in the project.