Friday, November 28, 2008
ISLAMABAD: After full backing of USA, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has found Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan (TAP) gas pipeline, as economically and financially viable project in its Technical Report (TA) but the Turkmenistan government has not yet completed evaluation and certification of the recoverable gas reserves at the Dauletabad field.
According to TA report of the ADB on TAP project, available with The News, the Government of Turkmenistan is financing an evaluation and certification of the recoverable gas reserves at the Dauletabad fields and a technical audit of its gas production and processing facilities.
The USA is sternly opposing any move to go ahead with Iran Pakistan India (IPI) gas pipeline and Washington is pursuing Islamabad and New Delhi to adopt TAP as alternate to TAP project.
The Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan Natural Gas Pipeline Project consists of a gas pipeline of about 1,700 kilometers that can transport up to 20 billion cubic meters of natural gas annually from the Dauletabad fields in southeast Turkmenistan to consumers in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and possibly India.
The final report found helpful in establishing the basic parameters of the pipeline. It concluded that the Project was economically and financially viable based on certain gas pricing assumptions and a number of scenarios and sensitivities.
In particular, the Final Report (i) selected a preliminary pipeline route, (ii) presented the pipeline design parameters that were considered reliable and safe, (iii) produced an environmental and social assessment of the southern route selected by the three participating countries for further study, and (iv) prepared analyses of financial and economic viability of the Project.
ADB fulfilled its role as an active development partner helping mobilise necessary technical and financial resources for the Project.
In May 2002, the heads of state of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Turkmenistan met in Islamabad and announced the formation of a coalition for implementing the Project.
At its first meeting in Ashgabat in July 2002, the Steering Committee requested the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to play the role of a development partner and to provide regional technical assistance for feasibility studies of the Project.
The Project has significant potential for enhancing stability and improving living standards in South and Central Asia. It will be a pioneering effort in linking the energy-deficit economies of South Asia to the hydrocarbon-rich Central Asian countries. MH