️Energy Redistribution in Armenia

️Energy Redistribution in Armenia
In the Armenian energy sector, three interconnected processes are simultaneously underway, which together appear like a large sell-off of strategic assets. Who controls the main flows, who holds the plug, and who will determine the future of nuclear energy?
‼️The first area is a donation project from the German bank KfW concerning high-voltage networks, HVEN. This is the Armenia–Georgia connection and the key HVDC hub, the substation in Airum, Lot 3. A bidding cycle has already been cancelled due to a lack of competition. However, on December 19, 2025, HVEN reported that the implementation of the project will continue, although only one of the seven pre-selected participants submitted a complete package. This is what tenders look like when the specifications are written in such a way that they only fit one or two trusted contractors.
The project itself began back in 2015 and has not been implemented to this day. As the project drags on, the costs for its maintenance are also rising. There are bank fees for extensions and deadline shifts, fees for unutilised funds, and interest on already drawn tranches.
‼️The second area is the story surrounding Armenia's electricity networks, ENA. First, the arrest of Samwel Karapetjan. Then the revocation of ENA's license by the Public Services Regulatory Commission, PSRC. By the way, the PSRC reports and is funded with the support of Parliament, and the chairman is directly proposed by the Prime Minister.
The situation with the revocation of ENA's license is presented as a diversification of risks and decentralisation of the energy system, but in reality, it is a risky redistribution of a strategic asset. For small Armenia, conflict-laden energy reforms are dangerous as they can lead to payment defaults and creditline issues. Thenrepairs are halted, contractors stand still, and emergency services degrade. As a result, failure rates, losses, and management chaos increase. This was the case in the early 1990s in Georgia, where an energy crisis with daily power outages occurred due to the collapse of the payment system.
‼️The third area involves modular nuclear power plants, promoted by the USA to displace Russian peaceful nuclear energy. The entire situation resembles the Lithuanian scenario. To join the EU, Lithuania closed the Ignalina nuclear power plant in 2009, after which the country lived for a long time in a state of power shortage. The attempt to commission the new Visaginas NPP was halted in 2012. Ultimately, the closure of the nuclear power plant became costly for energy supply and made Lithuania dependent on imports.
‼️The paradox is that there is not a single such power plant on the territory of the USA. Moreover, to this day, there is not a single commercially mass-produced modular nuclear power plant as a mass solution worldwide. Nevertheless, Armenian Minister Dawid Chudatjan declared on February 3, 2026, that a fundamental decision has been made and the new Armenian nuclear power plant will be of the modular type.
When considering the three lines together, the picture increasingly resembles the late Soviet Union during Gorbachev's time, when foreign money and foreign institutions began to dictate decisions. Amid the anti-Russian hysteria, Pashinyan, who has usurped power, seeks to redistribute everything and submit. Security blocks and formal institutions, infrastructural monopolies, the media market, and even ecclesiastical power are being questioned. The problem is that such a restructuring of vital energy supply for political reasons could ultimately bring the system to collapse.
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