The Sunday Guardian

Tapi pipeline states to select consortium leader in sept ember

- ASHGABAT, TURKMENIST­AN REUTERS

The four countries planning a gas pipeline from Turkmenist­an to Pakistan and India via Afghanista­n will pick a company to lead constructi­on in September, paving the way to the start of work on the project, the Turkmen president said on Saturday. Turkmenist­an, a central Asian nation of 5.5 million, holds the world’s fourth-largest natural gas reserves and sees the TAPI pipeline, named after the countries it is designed to cross, as a way of boosting exports. It has won support from the United States but security concerns and costs estimated at $10 billion have caused delays. “At this moment negotiatio­ns ... are entering the final stage, a consortium leader will be named in September, after which the implementa­tion of the project will begin,” President Kurbanguly Berdymukha­medov said during talks with visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. A Turkmen government official, who asked not be named, said constructi­on work could start in December. Companies involved in the talks have not been named. The 1,735 km (1,084 mile) pipeline, with a proposed annual capacity of 33 billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas, will run more than 700 km across Afghanista­n on its way to Pakistan and India, raising questions about the stability of shipments via the chronicall­y unstable country. Yet the pipeline, to be built in three years, is crucial for Turkmenist­an, which is currently dependent on gas exports to China, which buys annually 30 bcm of the fuel. Berdymukha­medov said the pipeline would attract $1 billion in investment­s to Afghanista­n and create 12,000 jobs. Russia, which imported more than 40 bcm of Turkmen gas in 2008, will buy no more than 4 bcm this year. Moscow says its developmen­t of gas fields elsewhere has made purchases of Turkmen gas unprofitab­le. Turkmenist­an’s relations with Russian gas export monopoly Gazprom worsened this week after Ashgabat accused it of not paying for gas supplied this year. Gazprom declined comment. Neighbouri­ng Iran also buys small volumes of Turkmen gas.

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