Iran-Pakistan-India Gas
Pipeline in Trouble
Paranjoy Guha Thakurta
NEW DELHI , Feb 14 (IPS) - Along with the possibility of international
sanctions hanging over Iran, the future of a 2,600 km pipeline to transport
natural gas from Iran to India through Pakistan, that is actively opposed by
Washington, has fallen into jeopardy.
While the three regional governments are going through the motions of planning
for the seven billion US dollar project and say that it will be unaffected by an
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) referral of Iran's nuclear dossier to
the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), analysts say chances of the pipeline
being built are now remote.
Pakistan's oil minister Amanullah Khan Jadoon will be visiting India for two
days from Feb. 17 to resume talks on the pipeline with Murli Deora, India's
newly-appointed minister for petroleum and natural gas.
Significantly, Deora is perceived as belonging to the pro-U.S. lobby within
India's ruling Congress party while Mani Shankar Aiyar, the man he replaced, a
fortnight ago has openly socialist views.
The change of petroleum ministers came amid speculation that New Delhi was
having second thoughts about going ahead with the ambitious pipeline project
after voting against Iran at the IAEA. There is a May deadline for India to join
the project.
Top independent commentators here have criticised the easing out of Aiyar.
Writing in the 'Outlook' weekly, Prem Shankar Jha said Aiyar may have been moved
out as a side-effect of the long-term, energy security plans he was beginning to
implement that would have shifted control of the energy market in this region
away from the U.S.
''Aiyar was not only determined to push ahead with the Iran-Pakistan-India gas
pipeline, to which the U.S. had voiced strong objection on the ground that it
would impede its efforts to isolate Iran, but he was actively putting in place
an Asian gas grid that would link India with Iran, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan,
China and Myanmar,'' Jha wrote in the magazine's issue published on the weekend.
The Indo-Pakistan pipeline talks come at a delicate time as India is seeking to
cement a nuclear cooperation agreement, signed last July, with the U.S., that
would see Washington assist India's civilian nuclear energy programme, perhaps
before Bush visits India early March.
New Delhi, which is seeking new sources of energy to feed its booming economy,
has been denied access to civilian nuclear technology for over two decades after
conducting nuclear tests in 1974. India has also staunchly refused to sign the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) on the grounds that it is discriminatory.
India's hopes of importing gas piped across Pakistan gained ground after the
nuclear-armed neighbours, that have fought three wars, started a peace process
in 2004. The pipeline project is a crucial aspect of India's efforts at
attaining 'energy security', since the country currently imports three-fourths
of its requirements of crude oil.
The proposed pipeline is expected to transport 90 million standard cubic metres
of gas every day from Iran's South Pars fields to India from 2009-10 onwards
while Pakistan would receive 60 million standard cubic meters.
Media reports have suggested that the governments of the three countries may
consider building parts of the pipeline as 'independent' projects in their
respective national territories to avoid sanctions.
After India stuck by its position against Iran during the February meeting of
the IAEA, Iran retaliated by refusing ratify a deal to supply five million
tonnes of liquefied natural gas to India from 2009.
At the meeting, the IAEA deferred by a month a vote on its resolution to report
Iran to the UNSC. There are fears that if sanctions are imposed, it might force
Iran, Pakistan and India to reschedule a proposed meeting in Tehran to discuss
the pipeline.
Deora said the pipeline project remains on. ''There are a lot of hurdles but we
hope to make things work. We need the gas from Iran to meet energy needs of
India and we are committed to make the project happen.'' But energy experts who
have been following the pipeline think otherwise.
''I don't foresee the pipeline being built in a hurry,'' Ravi K Batra,
distinguished fellow at the Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), a New Delhi-
based think tank, told IPS in an interview.
While acknowledging that the pipeline was a 'win-win-win' situation for the
three countries involved, Batra pointed out at least three reasons why the
pipeline project would have to be placed on the backburner.
Firstly, U.S. opposition to the pipeline is strident. ''The U.S. is not pulling
its punches,'' said Batra, who served as energy expert with India's public
sector oil establishment before joining TERI.
The second reason relates to the pricing of gas. India would like to pay an
'affordable price' for the gas from Iran and, according to Batra, this is a mere
euphemism for prices below prevailing market rates. So far, Iran has not been
obliging.
Finally, the pipeline project has been affected by the unrest in Pakistan's
Baluchistan province. ''There is talk of building a longer pipeline along
Pakistan's coast which may be longer but safer,'' Batra said.
Already, possibilities for an alternate pipeline to bring gas from Turkmenistan
to India through Afghanistan and Pakistan is being considered, Batra pointed
out.
Officials in Islamabad and New Delhi have admitted that they may have to
re-evaluate the gas pipeline project if the UNSC votes in favour of imposing
sanctions on Iran.
By coincidence, the first tripartite meeting on the pipeline is to be held in
Tehran in March, around the same time the IAEA meets in Vienna to discuss Iran's
nuclear programme.
Pakistan and Iran, at a meeting in Islamabad in January, agreed to hold the
meeting as scheduled and, so far, there has been no move to defer it. The
meeting is meant to finalise the project structure and draw up a framework
agreement, besides firming up technical and legal issues and those relating to
political insurance to ensure smooth operation.
Senior officials from the three countries attending a two-day workshop in New
Delhi on Jan. 30-31 worked out some of the technical details of the project such
as India's capability of making steel required for the pipeline.
For India, the project makes economic and environmental sense. Gas is much
cleaner than liquid fuels and can be cheaply transported through pipelines laid
on the ground.
As the owner of the world's second-largest proven natural gas reserves, Iran is
keen to exploit its resources to earn revenue. It is, therefore, actively
pursuing gas export deals with various countries, including India that has a
huge and growing market for natural gas.
According to the Energy Information Administration of the U.S. government,
natural gas use in India in 2002 was nearly 25 billion cubic metres and is
projected to reach 34 billion in 2010 and 45.3 billion in 2015. (END/2006)