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Most visitors in July came from Azerbaijan (+13.1% y/y), Russia (-6.4% y/y), Turkey (+9.6%) and Armenia (+3.2%), GNTA said.
While the number of visitors from Russia declined rather moderately, a positive trend was maintained by visitors from the European Union: Germany (+40.7% y/y), Latvia (+31.6% y/y), Poland (+26.9% y/y), the UK (+24.6% y/y) and France (+25.5% y/y).
The countries with the most significant increase in the number of visitors to Georgia were, however, from Asia and particularly from the former Soviet area: Tajikistan (+242.3% y/y), Uzbekistan (+155.5% y/y), Kyrgyzstan (+102.3% y/y), China (+52.8% y/y), Saudi Arabia (+52.6% y/y) and Kazakhstan (+54% y/y).
In January-July, Georgia hosted 2,697,624 tourists (+8% y/y) and 4,961,918 international travellers (+7.8% y/y). In the year-to-date period, most visitors came from Russia (+22.1% y/y), Azerbaijan (+5.6% y/y), Armenia (+2.9% y/y) and Turkey (-0.3% y/y).
9.1.5 Infrastructure and construction sector news
Maersk asserts it is moving ahead with Georgia port that rivals Anaklia deep-sea project
APM Terminals, part of the Denmark-based Maersk conglomerate, plans to invest $250mn to $300mn in the construction of a new deep-sea port in Poti on Georgia’s Black Sea coast, APM Terminals Europe regional director Igor van den Essen said while visiting Tbilisi on August 28.
Van den Essen’s visit comes at a critical moment for the development of a competing project, Anaklia deep-sea port, located slightly north of Poti.
The answer to the question of whether the Anaklia Development Consortium (ADC) will opt to shelve its plans for a $2.5bn deep-water port because of government support for a rival Black Sea development became even more difficult to determine following developments in early June.
ADC, which groups Georgian and US investors among others, warned on May 30 that it was “on the verge of stopping” its national flagship project in Anaklia because, in a “shocking” move, Georgia’s economy and sustainable development ministry was set to issue a permit for port construction in Poti. However, later on May 30 Georgian Economy Minister Natia Turnava announced that a deep-water port in Poti would not be built as the permit green-lighted for the infrastructure had been cancelled. But at the same time, Georgian authorities expressed concerns over the prospects for the realisation of the Anaklia project by ADC. The anxieties were relayed in the context of an emerging political rivalry between Georgian Dream ruling party chairman and oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili and ADC’s former head Mamuka Khazaradze, an entrepreneur who co-founded TBC Bank and is planning to unveil a new political movement in advance of the general election scheduled to take place in Georgia next year.
At the press conference on August 28, Claus Lawrence, CEO of APM Terminal Poti, argued that a large-sized deep-water port like Anaklia would make no economic sense for Georgia’s Black Sea coast, while APM Terminals’ plans for a not-so-deep port were logical. He even set a precise water depth limit for ports that to him would make sense in Georgia: 16 metres, which is exactly the depth planned by ADC under an agreement signed with the government of Georgia envisaging $2.5bn of investments, out of which $600mn would be in the first development phase. APM terminals envisages a depth of 13.5-14.5 metres at Poti.
Georgia has not yet approved the development of a deep-water port in Poti. In fact, a former minister of economy was among officials replaced after the issuing of a preliminary construction permit related to the Poti project caused controversy. But as the ADC project no longer enjoys firm support from the
50 GEORGIA Country Report October 2019 www.intellinews.com