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Home > News > World News > Article > Pakistan might opt out of IPI project

Pakistan might opt out of IPI project

Updated on: 15 January,2009 02:21 PM IST  | 
PTI |

With prospects of any agreement with India still hanging, Pakistan might also opt out of the proposed $7.4 billion tripartite gas pipeline project with Iran.

Pakistan might opt out of IPI project

With prospects of any agreement with India still hanging, Pakistan might also opt out of the proposed $7.4 billion tripartite gas pipeline project with Iran.



Pakistani authorities might recommend to parliament to abandon the proposed Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project as Tehran is demanding higher gas prices, a media report said on Thursday.



With Iran seeking an 'exorbitant' $10 to 11 per mmbtu of gas from Pakistan, the authorities believe the project is no longer economically viable for the country, an unnamed petroleum ministry official told The News daily.



The recommendation to abandon the project may be made during a meeting today of a steering committee chaired by Asim Hussain, the Adviser to the Prime Minister on Petroleum.


The committee is set to discuss the pros and cons of the 'irrational demand' of Iran with regard to gas prices and other related issues.


After framing recommendations for the future strategy for the pipeline project, the committee will sensitise parliament on the issue and leave it to the House to decide to either continue the dialogue with Iran or to quit the project.


The official said Pakistan and Iran had earlier agreed on a price of $6.66 per mmbtu of gas in December 2007. The petroleum ministry briefed Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani about three months ago and advocated "abandoning the project keeping in view the irrational demands of Tehran".


In that meeting, the ministry recommended the government should instead go in for "aggressive exploration and production of oil and gas" within Pakistan.


The country is rich in oil and gas, particularly in Balochistan province, and if the government "manages to enforce its writ by giving the ownership feeling to the local people, then aggressive oil and gas exploration can be carried out", sources told the newspaper.


The official said there was a 'complete failure' in talks with Iran when Asim Hussain recently visited Iran. The deadlock in parleys was a setback for energy-starved Pakistan as both countries had initiated negotiations in 1992-93 and there "still seems no light at the end of the tunnel" with regard to beginning work on the much-delayed pipeline.


Iran shocked Pakistan by backing out of a proposed gas sales purchase agreement some months ago and coming up with new proposals for selling gas under the project.


Since then, no progress has been made on the issue, the official said.

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