Georgia and Russia to cooperate in hydro plant

Georgia and its pipelines may be central to plans to bypass Russia as Europe’s main gas supplier, but the country may soon be partially dependent on Russia for its own power supply. Georgia has sold a partial management stake in the hydroelectric plant that supplies almost half the country’s power to a Russian state-controlled energy ...

By , a former associate editor at Foreign Policy.

Georgia and its pipelines may be central to plans to bypass Russia as Europe's main gas supplier, but the country may soon be partially dependent on Russia for its own power supply.

Georgia and its pipelines may be central to plans to bypass Russia as Europe’s main gas supplier, but the country may soon be partially dependent on Russia for its own power supply.

Georgia has sold a partial management stake in the hydroelectric plant that supplies almost half the country’s power to a Russian state-controlled energy firm for $9 million. The plant straddles the border between Georgia-proper and the Russian-occupied territory of Abkhazia. Even though Russia is now paying for electricity that Abkhazians and nearby Russians were already using for free and Georgia will maintain ownership, Georgian opposition leaders smell hypocrisy:

Salome Zurabishvili, leader of the opposition Georgian Way party, sharply criticized the move. “The government is a traitor, which says, on the one hand, that Russia is an occupier, and on the other hand makes deals with the same country.”

Even though this seems like a decent deal for Georgia, Mikheil Saakashvili’s government had to expect to take a hit from the public. It may be a sign that while top Georgian officials continue to decry the Russian occupation of their territory, in reality they’re learning to live with it.

Joshua Keating was an associate editor at Foreign Policy. Twitter: @joshuakeating

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