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Future of Gwadar oil refinery planned to be built by Iran uncertain

Surenas

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ISLAMABAD: A multi-billion-dollar oil refinery planned to be built by Iran at Gwadar port is facing an uncertain fate as Pakistan government has refused to grant the same incentive to the refinery that was offered to Pak Arab Refinery Limited (Parco).

According to sources, the government had promised a 25% rate of return to Parco, jointly owned by the government of Pakistan and Abu Dhabi, at the time of commissioning the project and the incentive lasted for eight years. However, the same rate of return is not being offered to Iran.
Despite attempts to contact the petroleum secretary, he was not available for comments.

During the tenure of previous government, Iran had agreed to set up the country’s largest oil refinery at Gwadar port costing $4 billion and with a refining capacity of 400,000 barrels per day.

Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Ghasemi, during a trip to Islamabad in February this year, agreed with Pakistan authorities to build the refinery in a joint venture with oil marketing giant Pakistan State Oil (PSO). This was expected to not only meet Pakistan’s refining needs, but also open avenues for China to tap oil supplies.

The refinery was part of an oil complex being built by Iran at the Gwadar port. According to the original plan, Tehran was also interested in laying an oil pipeline from its territory to Gwadar to transport crude oil for processing.

According to a senior government official, China had also come up with a plan to construct oil and gas pipelines from Gwadar under the Pak-China Economic Corridor.

Beijing expressed interest in the oil pipeline under a programme to link Iran with China through oil and gas pipelines.

Earlier, China was interested in joining the Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project, but did not push ahead with the plan following handover of Gwadar port operations to Singapore Port Authority, an official said. Now that Beijing has taken over control of the port, it is going ahead with different projects including oil and gas pipelines.

Former president Pervez Musharraf had also coined the idea of establishing a trade corridor to meet Beijing’s energy needs and offered help for constructing a strategic oil pipeline from Gwadar to China’s border.

In limbo: Gwadar oil refinery future uncertain – The Express Tribune

Must be a pain in the *** for Iranian diplomats; to deal with all these political weak and unreliable South Asian states in energy related matters. Both India and Pakistan surrender in the light of external political pressure.
 
Problem is who is going to insure IPI pipeline? it has no backing unlike TAPI which is backed by ASEAN and Russia as well as USA

IPI would be ideal but the ground reality and external pressure mean it is a long way away as is TAPI
 
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