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TAPI Natural Gas Pipeline Project to be Launched in 2021

In my opinion it should be direct road with no connections to Pakistan and monitored on all bits... and minimum speed should be 45kmh...

It will require whole division to monitor. Not economical.

Could be a railway line freight. Scan it as it comes into the country either side.

Ultimately closer ties would help build diplomacy and find a non military solution to our disputes. Unfortunately current Sanghi govt only needs nuking.
 
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This goes back to the basic question. Is India a enemy, a friend or just a neighbour. If it is the two later ones then open the border, let trade flourish. Pakistani consumer would be the biggest beneficiary. Cheaper and better everything in India. But please give up on Kashmir and make peace.

The problem with Pakistan is they can't make up their minds. enemy or not? That is the question.


india is our number 1 enemy forever.
TAPI Natural Gas Pipeline Project to be Launched in 2021

Posted 4 mins ago by Ahsan Gardezi

Asian Development Bank | Natural Gas Pipeline Project | ProPakistani


The first phase of the Turkmenistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan–India Natural Gas Pipeline project is planned to be launched in 2021, says the Asian Development Bank (ADB).


In its latest report ‘Asian Economic Integration Report 2021’, the ADB stated that the Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation’s (CAREC) large regional energy and infrastructure projects have been on track, including the flagship Turkmenistan–Uzbekistan– Tajikistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan Power Interconnection Framework, and Central Asia–South Asia Electricity Transmission and Trade Project.

The report added that the ADB is also implementing a technical assistance (TA) project to support the government of Pakistan on economic corridor planning to reap expanded regional cooperation and integration benefits.

The report mentioned that the health and socioeconomic impact of the pandemic and virus containment measures are hurting cross border migration. Migrants from top source countries in Asia (including India, the PRC, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and the Philippines) were hit hard, while job and income losses had dire consequences for their families in their native countries.

The region’s export volume barely grew by 0.05 percent in 2019 which is a significant drop from the 2018 growth rate of 3.5 percent. Most of the major exporter economies in Asia had either negative or decelerating growth rates. Those with negative growth rates included Hong Kong, China (–7.3%), Indonesia (–3.3%), Thailand (–3.0%), Japan (–1.9%), Malaysia (–2.0%), the Republic of Korea (–1.8%), and Singapore (–3.0%).
The Liberalization Quality Indicator captures the openness of an economy to foreign investment, or conversely, the degree of control maintained by a state over foreign investment.
The indicator is based on the coding of three provisions related to entry: the regulation of foreign investment entry (admission clause), the regulation of transfer of investment-related funds out of the host state, and the presence of non-economic standards.

The index provides a proxy for an economy’s stance on the FDI capital transfers (equity, reinvested earnings, or profit shifting) and long-term capital movements. The report highlighted that the results suggest that economies with a low score (Myanmar, the PRC, and Vietnam) tend to have a more restrictive approach to foreign investors, whereas economies with a high score (Vanuatu, India, and Pakistan) are more open to foreign investment.
Asia’s largest source of remittances remains the Middle East with an inflow of $100.4 billion in 2019, 5.3 percent ($5.0 billion) more than in 2018. Almost all outflows went to two Asian subregions, South Asia (82.3 percent) and Southeast Asia (17.4 percent) — around 50 percent (about 21 million) of migrants from South Asia and 20 percent (about 4 million) from Southeast Asia reside in the Middle East.

India, Pakistan, and the Philippines received a total of $76.6 billion, equivalent to 76.3 percent of Middle East outflows to Asia and 53.1 percent of its outflows worldwide. Year-to-date remittances in the second quarter (Q2) of 2020 grew in India (3.5 percent YoY) and Pakistan (8.8 percent), suggesting that the pandemic had not affected remittance-sending behavior.
Growth in internet retailing has been robust across Asian economies. Growth has accelerated in recent years in a number of Asian countries. Notably, the share of foreign retailing sales has grown at a faster pace across geographic clusters in the past few years.

Compounded annualized growth is highest in Pakistan, while the share of foreign internet retailing in Uzbekistan tops the region. The range of internet retailing sales-to GDP ratios in 2018 remains wide, between 20 percent and less than 0.02 percent.

The report further noted that from 2017 to 2020, the share of workers in creative and multimedia has increased by 34 percent in Bangladesh and by 40 percent in Indonesia.
To date, it accounts for around 59 percent of Bangladesh’s online workforce and 74 percent of Indonesia’s online workforce. In the Philippines, creative and multimedia online workers share the bulk of online employment (47 percent) while its share is 31 percent in Pakistan.

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NO WAY will the indians be part of this. But TAP will flourish.
 
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TAPI is an American sponsored project. The Americans have been dreaming of materializing this project for decades. It is a dead horse. It won’t be realized.
 
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I have been hearing about TAPI and Iran-Pakistan (minus India) for the last 15 years or so. If I am not wrong the actual proposal dates back to 90s or 80s.

I will always dismiss these deadlines until the gas pipeline is laid and the gas has started flowing in these countries. These projects are so difficult that even if the pipeline is there they may never see the daylight due to various political and strategic reasons.
 
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They should rename the project to Modi Da Yaar Pipeline Project.

The elitist Pakistani power usurpers just cannot let go of the lactating Indian teet.
 
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while this guy is spinning the history to build his narrative (getting key facts wrong about Afghan history) if it is indeed true the US is trying to broker a deal between the Taliban and Turkmenistan, it could be an unofficial acceptance by the US of Taliban rule in Kabul soon enough. Also, at $10 million/month transit fee it could create a minimal foundation to ensure some basic social services. If the US is brokering this deal for Turkmenistan, it could also be Turkmenistan that ends up hosting US bases. An air corridor from Incirlik to Turkmenistan wouldn’t have to cross Iranian, Russian, Pakistani or Chinese air space. There hasn’t been any word either way from Turkmenistan on the issue of bases. IMHO, The Mary 2 air base will probably be the future CT base.


Turkey may also be involved to broker this deal, but that is just further speculation on my part due to Turkish air bases and air space most probably being used to make this possible.

At 9:00-11:10
 
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I'll believe when I see it. This thing has been in the works for 25 years.
TAPI is an American sponsored project. The Americans have been dreaming of materializing this project for decades. It is a dead horse. It won’t be realized.
Americans don't care about TAPI....that's why it went nowhere. They prefer India buy LNG from American shale.
 
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I don't think India wants cheap gas , so we will take the extra supply for Balochistan province
 
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Pakistan Committed to Gas Pipeline Project With Turkmenistan

1630076488454.png


© Sputnik / Kirill Braga
ASIA & PACIFIC
09:56 GMT 26.08.2021Get short URL

MOSCOW (Sputnik) - Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi reiterated on Thursday his country’s commitment to cooperation with Turkmenistan, including on the construction of a major regional pipeline and enhancing security in Afghanistan.

"Pleased to call on President [of Turkmenistan] #GurbangulyBerdimukhammedov today in Ashgabat. I reiterated Pakistan’s commitment to enhance our economic connect through various projects including TAPI [Turkmenistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan–India Pipeline]. Also shared imp of a peaceful #Afghanistan & the need to continue close coordination," Qureshi tweeted.

The 1,800-kilometre TAPI gas pipeline will allow Turkmenistan to diversify its gas export and directly deliver gas to Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. However, the chaotic security situation in Afghanistan hampers the construction of the pipeline. In February, the Taliban (terrorist organisation, banned in Russia) pledged not to jeopardise the project after a meeting of the Taliban delegation with Turkmen Foreign Minister Rashid Moradov.

Following a weeks-long offensive launched after the US started withdrawing forces from Afghanistan, the Taliban entered Kabul on 15 August and caused the civilian government to fall. This prompted thousands of locals to seek escape for fear of reprisals from the militants. Many countries have since begun evacuating their diplomatic missions and citizens from the Central Asian nation.




Afghanistan will get $1billion a year for transit through the TAPI gas pipeline

In February, Taliban* paid a visit to Turkmenistan to pledge support for a planned gas pipeline. The delegation led by Mullah Abdul Gani Baradar expressed full support and promised to protect the project.

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Ashgabat, August 27 - Neftegaz.RU.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Mahmood Qureshi said implementation of the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline (TAPI) was beneficial for the entire region, with Afghanistan alone to get $1 billion as transit fee and royalty.

Talking to the media following his meeting with Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov, the foreign minister said the project was expected to create 2,000 new employment avenues with immense opportunities.
Qureshi added:
  • In near future, the convening of a meeting of foreign ministers from neighbouring states was under consideration to discuss the Afghan situation
  • Pakistan and Turkmenistan would continue collaboration with special representatives from both sides to hold meetings on strengthening ties
The foreign minister mentioned that the TAPI project was discussed in detail with the Turkmen president, wherein he reiterated Pakistan’s commitment to enhance economic connect through various projects including TAPI.

TAPI has long been hailed as a monumentally important project, solving not just Turkmenistan’s limited customer problem, but more importantly, bringing much-needed energy resources to South Asia – if it can ever be built.

The TAPI pipeline was 1st proposed over 30 years ago in a 1995 MoU between Turkmenistan and Pakistan.
The 1,814-km TAPI pipeline is expected to supply about 33 billion m3 of gas and is projected to run from the Galkynysh gas field in Turkmenistan to India, passing through Herat and Kandahar in Afghanistan, to Pakistan.

The state company of Turkemenistan, Turkmengas, is the main contributor to the project, responsible for financing $8.5 billion of the $10 billion costs as well as managing the TAPI pipeline.

*The Taliban is a terrorist organization banned in Russia





That $1 billion figure is possible only when India imports its share of gas (42% or 13.86 bcm/ year). It will be prudent for Pakistan to ask Turkmenistan in investing on an Lng export terminal at Karachi, and help expand Turkmenistan reach to unexplored, untapped markets (for Turkmen gas) like South Asia (Bangladesh), Southeast Asia (Thailand, Phillipines, Vietnam), Far East Asia (South Korea, Japan, Taiwan), Europe. It will be a win-win scenario for Turkmen-Afghanistan-Pakistan, with or without India's participation. I really hope and wish Pakistan is working on such a proposal.
 
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I dont think so... and projects like these will make india somewhat dependent on us.. we should also make a route for them to trade with Afghanistan a route... this will allow us an upper hand diplomatically... and we can put pressure on em regarding Kashmir..

If India wanted to be dependent on Pakistan for its energy needs, it would have joined the IPI. So why would it join TAPI. Would Pakistan agree to TAPI if the role was reversed? Unlikely in this current environment.

Though a trade route through Pakistan would be ideal, it would create a dependency that India doesn't want. For the moment, India will be content with using the port of Chabahar to trade with Afghanistan.
 
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If India wanted to be dependent on Pakistan for its energy needs, it would have joined the IPI. So why would it join TAPI. Would Pakistan agree to TAPI if the role was reversed? Unlikely in this current environment.

Hi,

It is India's prerogative, whether to be dependent on Pakistan for it's energy supplies or not, it should have considered it before signing GSPA or calling for its renegotiations.

"In a step that is likely to boost peace and give new shape to regional energy cooperation, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Turkmenistan, on Wednesday, inked the historic gas sale purchase agreement (GSPA) for the $7.6-billion Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) gas pipeline, often touted as the peace pipeline."


"India has sought re-negotiation of the natural gas price it is to source through a proposed USD 10 billion Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) pipeline in view of the slump in global energy markets, a top source said."


It should scrap it now citing IEA takeover and avoid any financial penalties.
 
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