DUSHANBE, June 29, 2011, Asia-Plus -- Rise in Russian gasoline tariffs is a heavy burden on Tajikistan’s economy and consumers, Tajik expert Mikhail Sim told Asia-Plus today.
According to him, Tajikistan’s annual requirements in gasoline are 360,000 tons. “An export duty set by the Russian government on one ton of gasoline is nearly US$416.00; it means that Tajikistan has to pay annually more than US$149 million for gasoline and export duty of US$193 million,” said Sim. “It means that under current Russian gasoline tariffs, Tajikistan has to pay nearly US$343 million, while the country’s budget stands at only some US$2 billion.”
“In order to save this money for development of Tajikistan’s economy, there ought to construct smalls oil refineries,” said the expert, “They cost between US$1 million and US$1.5 million and they could be constructed just in four or five months. Such ore refineries are repaid in six months. If to construct two or three small oil refineries, the country could meet 60-70 percent of its annual requirements in oil products.”
On the problem of providing the supposed refineries with raw materials, Sim noted that state unitary enterprise, Naftugaz va Angisht (Oil, Natural Gas and Coal), annually produced up to 27,000 tons of oil. “The deficient volume could be imported,” he noted.
One Tajik killed and one another injured in the Azerbaijan plane crash in Kazakhstan
How is the counter-terrorism agenda changing globally, and where does Tajikistan fit in?
The President of Russia hopes for CIS military units' participation in the May 9 parade
Tajik citizens will now provide fingerprints to obtain a criminal record certificate
First group of Tajik workers to travel to South Korea as welders in 2025
Agriculture in Tajikistan: growth in all sectors except cotton production
Dushanbe police warns: flashing lights and sirens on private cars are prohibited
Informal CIS summit at Igora resort: what did presidents discuss?
Emomali Rahmon extends condolences to Ilham Aliyev over plane crash
The death toll in Aktau air crash rises to 38
All news
Авторизуйтесь, пожалуйста