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Iran, Pakistan to launch gas pipeline project

An excellent analysis of IP pipeline project.

Politics and the pipeline


Asif Ezdi
Monday, March 18, 2013
From Print Edition

The writer is a former member of the Pakistan Foreign Service.

The ground-breaking ceremony for the Pakistan section of the Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline last Monday was an event of high symbolic importance. It was designed to seal Pakistan’s commitment to finally go ahead with the project 19 years after it was first mooted. But much of the western media played down its significance. One leading news agency described it as a “nebulous deal” and The Economist weekly wrote that it looked like a gimmick. The British weekly noted also that for five years Zardari’s administration had sat on the country’s energy crisis, with little action beyond get-rich-quick schemes for his cronies. The spokeswoman of the State Department also expressed doubts that the pipeline will ever be built. “We’ve heard this pipeline announced about 10 or 15 times before in the past,” she said, “so we have to see what actually happens.”

There can be no doubt that Zardari was motivated mainly by considerations of domestic politics and that his main purpose was to give the PPP a badly needed boost in the coming elections. It is also true that a lot of work remains to be done before Iranian gas starts flowing into Pakistan. But even if Zardari’s main interest was to advance narrow party interests and even with the uncertainty surrounding the completion of the project, going ahead with it was the right decision. Also, “what actually happens” depends largely upon us, especially on the resourcefulness of the new government and on whether it has the spine and the nerves to stand up to US bullying.

The pipeline certainly makes a lot of economic sense, because it will narrow the huge energy deficit that is crippling our economy. The price at which Iran has offered to sell the gas is not cheap but our domestic resources are depleting and the choice is not between cheap gas and not-so-cheap gas, but between an assured supply of gas at international prices and no gas at all.

The pipeline agreement will also serve the foreign policy interests of both countries. Iran will gain because it will lessen the country’s isolation in the face of US-led economic sanctions. For its part, Pakistan will benefit from the fact that the pipeline deal will help repair our somewhat frayed relations with Iran and blunt India’s effort to encircle Pakistan by building up strategic partnerships with our western neighbours. The Indian policy planners cannot have failed to notice that the ground-breaking for the pipeline took place close to the southern Iranian port of Chabahar which India is developing in order to gain access to landlocked Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan and as an outpost to outflank Pakistan in the western Arabian Sea.

India cannot also have missed the fact that Iran and Pakistan have begun talks on an oil refinery at Gwadar, not far from Chabahar. In another sign of growing mutual trust between the two countries, Ali Akbar Velayati, a top foreign policy aide of Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei, last month rejected media reports that Iran viewed Pakistan’s development of the Gwadar deep-sea port with suspicion.

India has been riled by the Iran-Pakistan pipeline also for another reason. For a long time, it tried to exclude Pakistan by pushing the idea of a deep-sea pipeline from Iran to India that would bypass Pakistan. India later agreed to consider an Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) pipeline when the sub-sea project was found to be financially non-viable. But Delhi was never enthusiastic about associating Pakistan with the venture. India finally withdrew from IPI in 2008 under US pressure, but gave security concerns and high costs as the reason.

Over the coming years, the Iran-Pakistan pipeline also has the potential to transform the geopolitical landscape of South and Central Asia and the Gulf region by opening up a trans-regional energy corridor that links China, the world’s second biggest economy, with the oil- and gas-producing countries of the Persian Gulf through Pakistan, with Gwadar as the hub. This route would reduce the distance between western China and the Gulf by a half.

Gwadar also has the advantage that it lies outside the Strait of Hormuz and would remain open even if that narrow passage is closed for some reason. Iran’s deputy oil minister, Javad Owji, was quoted last week as saying that Iran is holding talks with several Chinese companies for the export of gas and LNG to China through a pipeline that passes through Pakistan. In addition, a deep-water port at Gwadar connected with the hinterland by modern road and rail links could also serve as a commercial and shipping hub which serves not only Pakistan but also Central Asia and western China.

Needless to say, these road and rail links and the pipeline can only be built if the situation in Balochistan is stabilised. That can only happen if bold steps are taken to satisfy the demand of the people of the province for genuine autonomy and to give them control over their natural resources.

If the opportunities that the pipeline deal opens up are vast, so are the challenges. One, the financing of the Pakistan section has still to be arranged; two, US has threatened that sanctions will be “triggered” if the project goes forward; and three, countries that fear being disadvantaged by the Iran-Pakistan pipeline and its possible extension to China at a later date will be tempted to step up efforts to destabilise Balochistan in order to hinder the realisation of the project.

Tehran has promised Pakistan a loan of $500 million out of the $1.3-1.5 billion needed to build the Pakistan section of the pipeline. Because any bank which provides the money would risk US sanctions, coming up with the rest will not be easy for Pakistan but it is not impossible.

Pakistan must also take seriously repeated US warnings of sanctions under its domestic legislation, the Iran Sanctions Act. But the US also needs Pakistan’s cooperation to extricate itself from Afghanistan. It is therefore very likely that while Washington will sanction any companies that participate in the pipeline project, it will not impose any cuts on its economic and military assistance programmes for Pakistan or use its clout in the IMF or other international financing institutions to block loans to Pakistan.

While opposing the Iran-Pakistan pipeline project and rejecting Pakistan’s demand for access to nuclear power technology, the US has not been wanting in expressing its “understanding” for Pakistan’s energy requirements. It has been particularly supportive of the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) pipeline. But as The Economist wrote, the Americans’ idea of gas all the way from Turkmenistan is a pipe dream.

Despite this, the US backs TAPI for two reasons: firstly, because it excludes Iran; and secondly because it fits in nicely with US strategic plans – under various innocuous sounding labels such as the “New Silk Road” project and the “Istanbul Process” – for the economic integration of South and Central Asia under Indian leadership.

Now that the PPP-led government has relinquished office, the next move on the Iran-Pakistan pipeline will be for the new government that comes into power after the elections. PTI and PML-Q have expressed support for the project. But disturbingly, the PML-N, the party with the best chance of forming the next government, has expressed reservations. Its spokesman Mushahid Ullah has said that PML-N would review the pipeline project. Tariq Fatemi, foreign policy adviser to Nawaz Sharif, has lamented that the PPP-led government would be “bequeathing to the next government this huge irritant in Pakistan-US relations”, indicating that PML-N views the pipeline as a problem rather than an opportunity.

Nawaz Sharif is not in power yet, but he has evidently decided not to lose any time in trying to curry favour with Washington. On this point at least, the difference between him and Zardari is hard to tell.

Email: asifezdi@yahoo.com
Politics and the pipeline - Asif Ezdi
 
All the best. Good move by zardari, he is a visionary leader, may he be re-elected for a second term:pakistan:

your being sarcastic right?
if not you guys can take him anyday from us. you can use him more in your economic progress than us.
 
Already posted in the main thread on this topic:

I think the IP project is not as great as it is made out to be. Some healthy skepticism is needed, still:

Pakistan and Iran: Gas, but not the useful sort | The Economist

Pakistan and Iran
Gas, but not the useful sort

Barren ground for a new pipeline
Mar 16th 2013 | ISLAMABAD |From the print edition


IT WAS smiles and handshakes all round on Pakistan’s border with Iran, as the presidents of the two countries posed on March 11th to mark the start of the construction of the Pakistani part of a pipeline that is supposed to bring Iranian natural gas to a country starved of energy. Blackouts cripple industry and bring daily misery to Pakistani households. The new pipeline is supposed to be completed by the end of 2014.

Yet ending misery appears not to be among the chief political motives. Rather, Iran hopes that the project will lessen the country’s international isolation. Pakistan’s relations with its neighbour have usually been chilly. But under President Asif Ali Zardari, they have warmed. That is indicative of Pakistan’s tilt away from the United States, which lobbied the government in Islamabad against the deal and which has been pushing the idea of an alternative pipeline running from Turkmenistan, through war-ravaged Afghanistan, and then into Pakistan and India. Instead, Pakistan has also begun talks with Iran about an oil refinery at its Gulf port of Gwadar. Pakistan recently decided to hand control of the new deep-sea port there to the Chinese, another development that concerns the United States, not to mention India.

The new pipeline comes from the giant South Pars gasfield and will snake into southern Pakistan. Iran has already built all but the final 320km (200 miles) of its bit of the pipeline, according to the deputy oil minister, Javad Owji. Now Pakistan has to build about 800km.

That it has to pass through the insurgency-ridden province of Balochistan is only one cause for doubting its completion. It is also not clear how Pakistan, which is strapped for cash, will finance its part of the pipeline, especially if hit by international sanctions for dealing with Iran. What is more, this is the last week that the current government, led by Mr Zardari’s Pakistan Peoples Party, has in office. According to polls, the opposition party of Nawaz Sharif, who is close to Iran’s foe, Saudi Arabia, looks set to lead the next government after an election, likely in May.

For five years, Mr Zardari’s administration has sat on the country’s energy crisis, with little action beyond get-rich-quick schemes for his cronies. The Iranian gas is not cheap. Exploiting Pakistan’s domestic reserves, which produce gas at about half the price, has been neglected. So, too, have imports of liquefied natural gas. Little has been done to deal with appalling inefficiencies in the country’s electricity system.

But even though the announcement of the Iranian pipeline looks like a gimmick, the Americans’ idea of gas all the way from Turkmenistan is a pipe dream. Beleaguered Pakistanis have longer to wait before gas flows into homes, or blackouts are a thing of the past.
 
Iran, Pakistan determined to enhance bilateral ties

The Iranian and Pakistani presidents have reaffirmed the two countries’ resolve to enhance their bilateral relations in different spheres.


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Pakistani counterpart Asif Ali Zardari met on Thursday on the sidelines of the 4th International Norouz Festival on the occasion of the Persian New Year in Turkmenistan’s capital of Ashgabat.

“Tehran and Islamabad enjoy ample potential to enhance the level of their cooperation in different sectors, particularly in energy and commercial transactions through which they can meet many of their needs,” Ahmadinejad said.

Zardari, for his part, reiterated Islamabad’s determination to immediately implement the bilateral projects, particularly in energy sector, and noted that nothing can create an obstacle in the way of the promotion of Iran-Pakistan ties.

On March 11, Iran and Pakistan officially inaugurated the final construction phase of multi-billion-dollar project Iran-Pakistan (IP) gas pipeline.

Iran has already constructed more than 900 kilometers of the pipeline on its territory.

ASH/MA

PressTV - Iran, Pakistan determined to enhance bilateral ties
 
what many Analysts are saying...is that the US would now support the Baloch rebels to create hindrance and blow up this gas pipeline which would pass through troubled Pakistan's Balochistan province !!!


US is already doing that anyway in many parts of the world.

Lets take Karachi, few weeks back it was US backed fools who killed the Shia's - it is very obvious. They wanted or thought that Iran would say "our Shias are being killed in Pakistan so we wont go ahead with the pipeline".

US is the Dajjal and problems and Israhell is the secondary Dajjal ;)
 
India in talks with Iran and US on the gas pipeline project
Tuesday April 6, 2013

Indian Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas M. Veerappa Moily said that the Indian Government is holding talks with Iran and the United States to discuss sanctions in relation to the gas pipeline project.

Moily said the pipeline project was beneficial for India and that is why they were conducting discussions with the Iranian and U.S. Governments, Iran’s SHANA news agency reported.

External Affairs Minister of India Salman Khurshid earlier said that India and Iran are likely to discuss the stalled Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) gas pipeline at a joint commission meeting in the first quarter of the year.

IPI project had been stalled over cost of gas as well as security of the pipeline.

India has been boycotting formal talks on the project since 2007 over security concerns. Iran and Pakistan have already signed pacts to implement the long-talked project on bilateral basis.

NIGC - National Iranian Gas Company
 
Iran to develop more of South Pars
Tuesday April 9, 2013

TEHRAN, April 9 (UPI) -- Iran aims to increase its natural gas production substantially by launching additional phases in the South Pars gas complex, an energy official said.

National Iranian Oil Co. Managing Director Ahmad Qalebani said Iranian gas production will increase by 5.2 billion cubic feet per day through the launch of phases 12-16 in the South Pars gas complex in the Persian Gulf, the oil ministry's news site, SHANA, reports.

Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi said last weekend the three phases would come on stream by the end of the Persian year in March.

Iran estimates that South Pars contains as much as 8 percent of the global natural gas reserves. The play is expected to feed a natural gas pipeline to Pakistan.


Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad met last month at the countries' border to mark the start of construction in Pakistan for the $7.5 billion natural gas pipeline from Iran.

The project has faced a series of delays since it was proposed in the 1990s. The United State has opposed the plan because of the potential financial benefit to Iran and its nuclear program.

Iran plans to add to South Pars gas complex - UPI.com
 
India in talks with Iran and US on the gas pipeline project
Tuesday April 6, 2013

Indian Minister of Petroleum and Natural Gas M. Veerappa Moily said that the Indian Government is holding talks with Iran and the United States to discuss sanctions in relation to the gas pipeline project.

Moily said the pipeline project was beneficial for India and that is why they were conducting discussions with the Iranian and U.S. Governments, Iran’s SHANA news agency reported.

External Affairs Minister of India Salman Khurshid earlier said that India and Iran are likely to discuss the stalled Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) gas pipeline at a joint commission meeting in the first quarter of the year.

IPI project had been stalled over cost of gas as well as security of the pipeline.

India has been boycotting formal talks on the project since 2007 over security concerns. Iran and Pakistan have already signed pacts to implement the long-talked project on bilateral basis.

NIGC - National Iranian Gas Company

So what should one think of us? Does India would like to see the IP-pipeline eventually extending to India? And if so, could it be part of greater deal between Iran-India-US about Afghan stability?
 
May be you guys should learn how Diplomacy is done and how to get what you want. Whole IPI drama was for getting much better deal like Civil Nuclear deal which you guys also asked for because we got it.

Learn few tricks from us. We try to protect national interest without firing a bullet. But if diplomacy fails, we have other options.


Wow, great dramabazi, we also call such acts, being a chavval.
 
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