At the end of 2022, Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili announced the reactivation of hydropower projects that had come to a standstill due to the protests and the start of new projects. “We can sell some electricity to the European Union. We are talking about millions of dollars in revenue for the country," Garibashvili stated in a speech."
A little earlier, on December the 17th, the president of the European Commission signed a memorandum on the construction of an energy cable under the Black Sea. Ursula von der Leyen assured that the project "could bring great benefits to Georgia: the country could become an electricity hub and the Georgian electricity market could integrate with the EU market."
Is it a coincidence that Garibashvili announced the resumption of work on controversial projects after Ursula von der Leyen's assurances? And what do Georgians, who have been protesting against the construction of hydroelectric power plants for 30 years, think about all this? Is Georgia really so dependent on Russia for its electricity supply? And what has cryptocurrency got to do with it all?
Photo by Marek Kowalczyk