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With Iran’s Help, India Eludes China in Race for Gas Riches

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Anyone looking for the biggest immediate impact from Iran’s nuclear deal may want to turn away from the Middle East and toward the Indian subcontinent.

With U.S. sanctions easing, India is racing to build a port in Iran that will get around the fact that its land access to energy-rich former Soviet republics in Central Asia has been blocked by China and its ally Pakistan.

“We’re seeing the latest manifestation of the Great Game in Central Asia, and India is the new player,” said Michael Kugelman, a South Asia expert at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. “It’s had its eyes on Central Asia for a long time.”


While the world focuses on what Iran’s opening means for Israel and Arab nations, the ramifications are also critical for Asia. Closer Iran-India ties would allow New Delhi’s leaders to secure cheaper energy imports to bolster economic growth and reduce the influence of both China and Pakistan in the region.

The six nations that make up Central Asia hold at least 11 percent of the world’s proven natural gas reserves, as well as substantial deposits of oil and coal, according to datacompiled by BP Plc. Afghanistan says its mineral wealth is valued at $1 trillion to $3 trillion.

“Iran can offer us an alternative route to Central Asia,” Indian Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar said in Singapore on July 20. “The resolution of the nuclear dispute and lifting of sanctions will allow our agenda of energy and connectivity cooperation to unfold seriously.”

‘Alternative Route’
India can be the first country to benefit from the deal in Asia, an Iranian diplomat told reporters in New Delhi this week. Iran was seeking billions of dollars in investment from India for ports, railways and airports, the diplomat said, asking not to be identified due to government rules.

Even before the deal to end sanctions was clinched, India reached an agreement to upgrade the Iranian port of Chabahar on the Arabian Sea. Two Indian state-run companies -- Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust and Kandla Port Trust -- have plans to invest $85 million to upgrade two berths.

-1x-1.jpg

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Kyrgyz Prime Minister Temir Sariev walk past a guard of honor during a welcoming ceremony in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan on July 11, 2015.

Photographer: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
On a five-nation Central Asian tour last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi backed an ambitious transit route through Iran that would effectively connect Europe to India by a series of sea, rail and road links. Currently, cargo from India has to go by air or take a detour through the Suez Canal.

Pathway to Europe
In a dry run on the alternative routes last August, the results showed that transit time from India’s financial capital of Mumbai could be more than halved to as short as 16 days and would slash costs by 70 percent.

Other plans are just as bold: A 900-kilometer (560 mile) railway would link the Iranian port to a part of Afghanistan where a group led by Steel Authority of India Ltd. holds rights to an $11 billion iron ore mine. Modi has proposed re-routing a Turkmenistan-India project through Iran, and his oil minister is reviewing a proposal for an undersea pipeline from India to Chabahar port.

“India isn’t energy insecure -- it’s surrounded by oil and gas,” said Subodh Kumar Jain, director of South Asia Gas Enterprise Pvt., the company behind the proposed $4.5 billion undersea pipeline. “The challenge is geopolitical, not technical or financial.”

China Dominance
China is the biggest economic player in Central Asia. It’s the top commercial partner for every nation except Afghanistan, with its $48 billion in trade to the region dwarfing that of India, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Turkmenistan pipes almost 80 percent of its gas to China.

China has welcomed the nuclear deal, noting in a statement that Iran once played a pivotal role in the ancient Silk Road trade route linking Europe and the Far East.

Pakistan is also important. The only Muslim-majority country with a nuclear bomb has refused to allow Indian trucks to pass through to Central Asia, and plans to build overland gas pipelines from Iran and Turkmenistan had long stalled.

“Pakistan has essentially had a stranglehold over India’s policy in the region,” said Harsh V. Pant, a professor of international relations at King’s College London. “India wanted to break that. Now, that constraint has been removed.”

Even so, Pakistan doesn’t see much of a threat, according to Commerce Minister Khurram Dastgir Khan. China is investing $45 billion in an economic corridor through Pakistan stretching from China’s western border to the Arabian Sea. Pakistan is also seeking a free-trade agreement with Iran.

Catching Up
“The scale of Chinese investment in Pakistan and in the corridor really dwarfs anything Indian is attempting in Iran,” Khan said in an interview in Islamabad on Wednesday.

Iran and India’s historical links date back to antiquity, when Indus Valley merchants plied across routes to Mesopotamia. Persian artists sculpted the Mughal architecture of India’s north, influencing structures such as the Taj Mahal.

More recently, India was one of Iran’s top oil buyers before international sanctions were tightened several years ago.

“As always, India will be playing catch up,” Kugelman said. “It sees itself in a race with China, and it simply doesn’t want to fall that far behind.”


With Iran’s Help, India Eludes China in Race for Gas Riches - Bloomberg Business


@MilSpec @Capt.Popeye @nair @SpArK @levina @ayesha.a @Koovie @Serpentine @Water Car Engineer @anant_s @janon @Indo-guy @IndoCarib @Echo_419 @bloo @danish_vij @alby @Chanakya's_Chant @PARIKRAMA @Hindustani78 @ranjeet @JanjaWeed @SR-91 @Star Wars @gslv mk3 @The_Sidewinder @The Huskar
 
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Ah well..... I do not really see an India-China thing. And it is an India-Iran thing to a lesser extent.
It is simply an "Iran thing" in the final analysis.

@Serpentine, @haman10 , other Iranian and Indian posters:
Chah Bahar is not just a port. It is a symbol of what Iran is and can be in the regional scheme of things. What Chah Bahar can do for Iran first, and the rest of the world later; is something that I have posted here on PDF on numerous occasions in related threads.
If India is going to be part of that, then it is good for India; because India needs all of that for its own economic growth. But other beneficiaries are Afghanistan, CARs (eventually) not to mention even China and USA if they hope to get some economic benefits and leverage in Afghanistan as well as the surroundings.

Money and Growth chases Stability. Iran seems to be getting poised and empowered to do just that.
 
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Iran in not of any mood to take panga with china for scums like u once u have voted against iranian in UN in support of US sanctions on iran
 
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Iran in not of any mood to take panga with china for scums like u once u have voted against iranian in UN in support of US sanctions on iran

Wow kya research kiya hai.... Why on earth will Iran take "panga" with China ? But Iran took "panga" with Amreeka for so long.... aisey kyun ?
Aur bhi kucch funday suna dey. :D
 
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Wow kya research kiya hai.... Why on earth will Iran take "panga" with China ? But Iran took "panga" with Amreeka for so long.... aisey kyun ?
Aur bhi kucch funday suna dey. :D
Sunata ho america se pange ka nuksan hua ab agar china ecnomic giant se panga lia wo bhi india ka lia tu iran ko mushkil hi hogi iran india pa tryst nahe karega pheli tarah aur iran ka wesa bhi bhot masla ha middle east se ab china se panga nahe le sakta
 
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Please ignore Super Falcon, he has an obsession with India.

Hearing India success stories gives him diarrhea :D
 
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Sunata ho america se pange ka nuksan hua ab agar china ecnomic giant se panga lia wo bhi india ka lia tu iran ko mushkil hi hogi iran india pa tryst nahe karega pheli tarah aur iran ka wesa bhi bhot masla ha middle east se ab china se panga nahe le sakta

Arey koi masla nahi.... panga bhi changa ho sakta hai. Sirf Jigar chahiye...... :lol:
 
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Accha ... you have just arrived from Comedy Central right now ?
But thanks for today's big joke............. ;) :rofl:
Proif it you have jigar instead making comments we come and destroy pak every single time this is a big joke
 
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Its all about money.
It would be wrong to assume that Iran would choose India over other countries once the sanctions are lifted. A good example of this is Farzad B oil field which was explored by Indian companies in 2008, but those companies 're now at the verge of loosing their control over the oil field as Iran had chosen to auction the oil field. Once put up for auction, Indian companies would find it hard to compete with American, Chinese and French companies, India need not worry about Chabahar port though. :)
 
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Its all about money.
It would be wrong to assume that Iran would choose India over other countries once the sanctions are lifted. A good example of this is Farzad B oil field which was explored by Indian companies in 2008, but those companies 're now at the verge of loosing their control over the oil field as Iran had chosen to auction the oil field. Once put up for auction, Indian companies would find it hard to compete with American, Chinese and French companies, India need not worry about Chabahar port though. :)

Breaking news we have got the contract (again) for developing that oil field
 
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Anyone looking for the biggest immediate impact from Iran’s nuclear deal may want to turn away from the Middle East and toward the Indian subcontinent.

With U.S. sanctions easing, India is racing to build a port in Iran that will get around the fact that its land access to energy-rich former Soviet republics in Central Asia has been blocked by China and its ally Pakistan.

“We’re seeing the latest manifestation of the Great Game in Central Asia, and India is the new player,” said Michael Kugelman, a South Asia expert at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. “It’s had its eyes on Central Asia for a long time.”


While the world focuses on what Iran’s opening means for Israel and Arab nations, the ramifications are also critical for Asia. Closer Iran-India ties would allow New Delhi’s leaders to secure cheaper energy imports to bolster economic growth and reduce the influence of both China and Pakistan in the region.

The six nations that make up Central Asia hold at least 11 percent of the world’s proven natural gas reserves, as well as substantial deposits of oil and coal, according to datacompiled by BP Plc. Afghanistan says its mineral wealth is valued at $1 trillion to $3 trillion.

“Iran can offer us an alternative route to Central Asia,” Indian Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar said in Singapore on July 20. “The resolution of the nuclear dispute and lifting of sanctions will allow our agenda of energy and connectivity cooperation to unfold seriously.”

‘Alternative Route’
India can be the first country to benefit from the deal in Asia, an Iranian diplomat told reporters in New Delhi this week. Iran was seeking billions of dollars in investment from India for ports, railways and airports, the diplomat said, asking not to be identified due to government rules.

Even before the deal to end sanctions was clinched, India reached an agreement to upgrade the Iranian port of Chabahar on the Arabian Sea. Two Indian state-run companies -- Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust and Kandla Port Trust -- have plans to invest $85 million to upgrade two berths.

-1x-1.jpg

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Kyrgyz Prime Minister Temir Sariev walk past a guard of honor during a welcoming ceremony in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan on July 11, 2015.

Photographer: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
On a five-nation Central Asian tour last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi backed an ambitious transit route through Iran that would effectively connect Europe to India by a series of sea, rail and road links. Currently, cargo from India has to go by air or take a detour through the Suez Canal.

Pathway to Europe
In a dry run on the alternative routes last August, the results showed that transit time from India’s financial capital of Mumbai could be more than halved to as short as 16 days and would slash costs by 70 percent.

Other plans are just as bold: A 900-kilometer (560 mile) railway would link the Iranian port to a part of Afghanistan where a group led by Steel Authority of India Ltd. holds rights to an $11 billion iron ore mine. Modi has proposed re-routing a Turkmenistan-India project through Iran, and his oil minister is reviewing a proposal for an undersea pipeline from India to Chabahar port.

“India isn’t energy insecure -- it’s surrounded by oil and gas,” said Subodh Kumar Jain, director of South Asia Gas Enterprise Pvt., the company behind the proposed $4.5 billion undersea pipeline. “The challenge is geopolitical, not technical or financial.”

China Dominance
China is the biggest economic player in Central Asia. It’s the top commercial partner for every nation except Afghanistan, with its $48 billion in trade to the region dwarfing that of India, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Turkmenistan pipes almost 80 percent of its gas to China.

China has welcomed the nuclear deal, noting in a statement that Iran once played a pivotal role in the ancient Silk Road trade route linking Europe and the Far East.

Pakistan is also important. The only Muslim-majority country with a nuclear bomb has refused to allow Indian trucks to pass through to Central Asia, and plans to build overland gas pipelines from Iran and Turkmenistan had long stalled.

“Pakistan has essentially had a stranglehold over India’s policy in the region,” said Harsh V. Pant, a professor of international relations at King’s College London. “India wanted to break that. Now, that constraint has been removed.”

Even so, Pakistan doesn’t see much of a threat, according to Commerce Minister Khurram Dastgir Khan. China is investing $45 billion in an economic corridor through Pakistan stretching from China’s western border to the Arabian Sea. Pakistan is also seeking a free-trade agreement with Iran.

Catching Up
“The scale of Chinese investment in Pakistan and in the corridor really dwarfs anything Indian is attempting in Iran,” Khan said in an interview in Islamabad on Wednesday.

Iran and India’s historical links date back to antiquity, when Indus Valley merchants plied across routes to Mesopotamia. Persian artists sculpted the Mughal architecture of India’s north, influencing structures such as the Taj Mahal.

More recently, India was one of Iran’s top oil buyers before international sanctions were tightened several years ago.

“As always, India will be playing catch up,” Kugelman said. “It sees itself in a race with China, and it simply doesn’t want to fall that far behind.”


With Iran’s Help, India Eludes China in Race for Gas Riches - Bloomberg Business


@MilSpec @Capt.Popeye @nair @SpArK @levina @ayesha.a @Koovie @Serpentine @Water Car Engineer @anant_s @janon @Indo-guy @IndoCarib @Echo_419 @bloo @danish_vij @alby @Chanakya's_Chant @PARIKRAMA @Hindustani78 @ranjeet @JanjaWeed @SR-91 @Star Wars @gslv mk3 @The_Sidewinder @The Huskar

Meanwhile Iran has assured India over licensing issue to develop it's Farzad-B oil field discovered by ONGC Videsh.

India allowed to develop Farzad-B gas project
In a major win for India, the Hassan Rouhani-led Iranian government has agreed to allow public sector firms ONGC Videsh, Oil India and Indian Oil...
6d637f19-99fb-4283-a0c1-b74d563a6387.jpg

In a major win for India, the Hassan Rouhani-led Iranian government has agreed to allow public sector firms ONGC Videsh, Oil India and Indian Oil (IOC) to develop the prolific Farzad-B gas project in Iran.

The development comes after a recent visit by an Indian delegation to Tehran, on the heels of the Islamic nation’s landmark deal with six other global players spanning over 20 months, to curtail sanctions levied on the energy-rich country for its alleged nuclear activities.

Getting access to energy-rich assets overseas is seen as one of the primary goals of the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government, to feed the increasing demand at home.

“Iran has said that the Farzad-B field is available for development. The modalities are to be worked out, which they have asked India to submit,” Biswajit Roy, director (human resources and business development) of Oil India told mediapersons in New Delhi.

Roy explained that though their Iranian counterparts have not given any written commitment, “verbally” they have asked Indian firms to submit the plan at the earliest. India would have to submit a detail field development plan for the prolific block.

Source:- India allowed to develop Farzad-B gas project | The Financial Express
 
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