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MOSCOW, September 7 (RIA Novosti) - The...

MOSCOW, September 7 (RIA Novosti) - The Russian automotive industry is to receive $2 billion in foreign investments within the next two or three years, but experts warn current policy may put it at risk, a respected business daily reported Wednesday. Vedomosti wrote that Trade and Economic Development Minister German Gref believed that the automotive industry was thriving because of a decision to reduce import duties on foreign car parts. He said four investors were ready to sign investment agreements and another six were in negotiations. A ministerial official said Gref was referring to investment agreements with the Avtoframos Russian-French joint venture, and Severstal-Avto and IzhAvto, which both produce South Korean cars. Overall investment now respectively total 230 million euros, $75 million and $90 million. Toyota has already started building a plant in Russia and will also sign a similar agreement soon. Gref estimated this investment at $1 billion this spring, the paper said. Vedomosti quoted Yelena Sakhnova, a market watcher with the United Financial Group, as saying that carmakers were planning to earn more on foreign, rather than Russian, models. "For instance, EBITDA at AvtoVaz (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) totals 10.4%, whereas companies assembling foreign cars in Russia earn at least 15%," Sakhnova said. According to the paper, easy-term customs clearance makes this business even more profitable. IzhAvto earned just $4 million in 2004. By assembling KIA Spectras, it hopes to make $200 million in net profits in five years. Since 2002, $1.15 billion has been invested into foreign-car assembly projects in Russia. A partnership between American giant General Motors and domestic producer Avtovaz had invested $338 million by the time it opened a plant and then pumped in another $195 million, the paper reported. The paper said that experts had warned about potential risks with the government"s current auto-industry policies. Alexander Agibalov, the managing director of AG Capital, told the paper: "China once had big tax breaks, but the policy created large concerns and one-day companies. The latter used the privileges they were entitled to and then curtailed production. The problem is knock-down assembly does not require major investment."


Police has grabbed hold of a video footage...

Police has grabbed hold of a video footage showing a notorious gang leader in Russia"s North Caucasus known as Alexander Tikhomirov or Said Buryatsky just minutes before he was killed in a FSB sweep, a law enforcement source said on Saturday.


Maxim Barsky was appointed the chief executive...

Maxim Barsky was appointed the chief executive of the Russian-British joint venture TNK-BP on Thursday, the TNK-BP board of directors said.

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Restrictions on professional video and photo...

Sergei Devyatov, a spokesman for the Federal Protection Service, or FSO, said professional video and camera shoots would be permitted in Red Square and in the Kremlin compound.

Amateur photography and video are currently allowed in the Kremlin, the president"s official residence, while permission is required for professional work.

Presidential press secretary Natalia Timakova said on Tuesday that Dmitry Medvedev had ordered the FSO chief to consider lifting the restrictions.

The order came after photographer Dmitry Ternovsky wrote in his Internet blog on Tuesday that he had managed to complain about the strict rules in the Kremlin to the president, who he met in the Krasnaya Polyana mountain ski resort in Russia"s Caucasus.

The resort, which will host skiing events at the Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014, is frequented by Medvedev and his powerful Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. Both are sport enthusiasts and often invite the press to watch them in action

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