Arab Times

Tehran tells Zardari gas pipeline must advance

Project opposed by US

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TEHRAN, Feb 28, (AFP): Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Wednesday urged the visiting Pakistani president to press ahead with a muchdelaye­d $7.5 billion gas pipeline project despite US opposition.

“The Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline is an important example of Tehran-Islamabad cooperatio­n, and despite hostilitie­s towards the expansion of ties we must overcome this opposition decisively,” Khamenei told Asif Ali Zardari, his office reported.

The gas pipeline project is strongly opposed by Tehran’s archfoe Washington.

“Accessing safe energy source is the first priority for any country including Pakistan. In this region, the Islamic republic is the only nation that has safe energy resources and we are ready to provide Pakistan its energy needs,” the allpowerfu­l Khamenei said.

Deeply

Zardari, who also met with his Iranian counterpar­t Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, was quoted by the leader’s office as saying: “We deeply believe in boosting bilateral ties.

“The internatio­nal and regional players have tried in vain to prevent expansion of Iran-Pakistan ties but the people have learnt how to act against the enemy of Islam.”

The pipeline project has run into repeated problems, including Pakistan’s difficulty in finding funds and opposition to the project from Washington, which has slapped Iran with a raft of sanctions over its nuclear activities.

The US State Department on Wednesday said it was providing Pakistan with alternativ­es that would avoid any sanctions violation.

“We recognise that Pakistan has significan­t energy requiremen­ts but we really think there are other long-term solutions to Pakistan’s energy needs,” said deputy acting spokesman Patrick Ventrell.

“And so we’ve been assisting as a government to contribute to the alleviatio­n of the energy crisis in Pakistan,” he said.

“It’s in their best interests to avoid any sanctionab­le activity, and we think that we provide and are providing ... a better from repatriati­ng earnings from its oil exports, requiring customers to pay funds into an escrow account at a bank in the purchasing country and limiting Iran’s use of the proceeds to buying goods in the countries where it exports its oil.

Also: TOKYO: Japan’s crude oil imports from Iran in January fell 29.5 percent from the same month a year ago, trade ministry data showed on Thursday, in line with reductions by other Asian buyers as Western sanctions on Tehran cut shipments.

Japan, the world’s third-biggest oil consumer, imported 1.178 million kilolitres (239,085 barrels per day) of Iranian crude last month, compared with 1.67 million kl (338,944 bpd) in January 2012, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) said.

In 2012, Japan slashed Iranian crude imports by 40 percent to 189,076 bpd, even though total oil imports rose 2.7 percent. way to meet their energy needs in some of the assistance we’re providing.”

The Pakistani media reported last year that Zardari would visit Iran in midDecembe­r 2012, when a final agreement was to have been signed, but the visit was delayed.

In 2010, Iran and Pakistan agreed that Tehran would supply between 750 million cubic feet (21 million cubic metres) and one billion cubic feet per day of natural gas by mid-2015.

Islamabad has said it will pursue the project regardless of US pressure, saying the gas is needed to help Pakistan overcome its energy crisis that has led to debilitati­ng blackouts and suffocated industry.

Iran has almost completed the pipeline work in its territory, but Pakistan has not yet started constructi­on of 780 kms (490 miles) of the pipeline on its side, which is said to cost some $1.5 billion.

Sanctions-hit Iran finally agreed to finance one third of the costs of laying the pipeline through Pakistani territory to Nawabshah, north of Karachi, with the work to be carried out by an Iranian company.

Pakistani officials in mid-December said Iran had promised a $500 million loan and that Islamabad would meet the rest of the cost.

“There are impediment­s in view of the US opposition to the project but we are determined to complete it to meet our fast-growing energy requiremen­ts,” said one government official on condition of anonymity.

Tehran has been strangled by a Western oil embargo that has seen its crude exports halve in the past year, while Pakistan has an acute need for energy and plans to produce 20 percent of its electricit­y from Iranian gas.

Iran has the second largest world gas reserves after Russia and currently produces some 600 million cubic metres a day, almost all of which is consumed domestical­ly due to lack of exports means.

The only foreign client is Turkey, which buys about 30 million cubic metres of gas a day.

Tough sanctions from Washington and Europe to force Iran to curb its nuclear programme have cut Iran’s oil exports by more than half last year, costing it more than $5 billion a month. Tehran says the programme is for civilian purposes.

The United States renewed waivers on sanctions for Japan and 10 European countries in September, and Japan’s waiver is up for renewal next month.

Iran held the first meeting in eight months with world powers in the Kazakh city of Almaty earlier this week. Although they agreed to meet again, rapid progress was unlikely with Iran’s presidenti­al election, due in June, raising domestic political tensions.

The IEA, the West’s energy agency, has said preliminar­y data suggested Iran’s oil exports could have fallen below 1 million bpd in January.

Underlinin­g the IEA’s estimate, Iranian crude imports by China, its biggest customer, plunged last month to 309,906 bpd, the lowest monthly amount since March 2012.

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