Khaleej Times

Pak pledge on Iran pipeline

We’ll build it, but sanctions are making it difficult, says minister

- Maria Golovnina

islambabad — Pakistan is committed to building a multi-billiondol­lar gas pipeline from neighbouri­ng Iran but the threat of internatio­nal sanctions makes the task difficult, the South Asian nation’s petroleum minister said on Friday.

The comments follow remarks last month by Iran’s oil minister that the country would probably abandon the contract, prompting speculatio­n that the two sides had decided to ditch the project altogether.

“There is no decision to shelve anything, there is no decision to delay anything, but the constraint­s remain,” Petroleum Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi told Reuters in an interview in Islamabad.

The $7.5-billion project has faced repeated delays since it was conceived in the 1990s to connect Iran’s giant South Pars gas field to consumers in energy-hungry Pakistan and India.

Pakistan has pursued the pipeline as a way of alleviatin­g severe energy shortages that have sparked violent protests and crippled the economy. At the same time, Islamabad badly needs the billions of dollars it receives in US aid. The United States has steadfastl­y opposed Pakistani and Indian involvemen­t in the project, saying it could violate sanctions imposed on Iran over nuclear activities Washington suspects are aimed at developing an atom bomb. Iran denies this.

“There are constraint­s with the constructi­on of the pipeline,” Abbasi said. “There is a threat of sanctions, either US or UN, and probably EU also. That limits what options we have with the construc- tion of the pipeline. “We are really hopeful that constructi­on should start soon, as soon as these issues are resolved.”

India, unlike Pakistan, quit the project in 2009, citing costs and security issues — a year after it signed a nuclear deal with Washington.

Pakistan, for its part, has made little progress on its section of the line for lack of funds and warnings it could be in violation of US sanctions on Iran, which sits on the world’s largest reserves of gas.

“The moment we connect the gas, the sanctions hit,” Abbasi said, adding that the sanctions would particular­ly affect the equipment procuremen­t process and other technical issues.

“We can construct the pipeline right up to the last metre, but the moment we connect, the sanctions are coming.”

Iran has spent hundreds of millions of dollars and nearly completed the 900km (560 mile) pipeline to the Pakistan border.

Under the contract, Iran is supposed to export 21.5 million cubic meters of gas per day to Pakistan from next year.

The cost of the Pakistani section of line is estimated at around $2 billion and Abbasi said Pakistan was ready to finance its part on its own. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Shahid Khaqan Abbasi during an interview at his office in Islamabad on Friday. —
Reuters Shahid Khaqan Abbasi during an interview at his office in Islamabad on Friday. —

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