Countries involved in a U.S.-backed trans-Afghanistan pipeline will sign a commercial agreement Wednesday that's aimed at keeping the much-delayed $7.6 billion project alive.
Countries involved in a U.S.-backed trans-Afghanistan pipeline will sign
a commercial agreement Wednesday that's aimed at keeping the much-delayed $7.6
billion project alive.
The
U.S.
has,
for almost 20 years, supported the plan to pipe gas over 1,800 kilometers (1116
miles) from
Turkmenistan
via
Afghanistan
to
Pakistan
and
India
--
commonly referred to as the TAPI pipeline. But the project has gotten nowhere
because of the Taliban insurgency in
Afghanistan
and
commercial disagreements between the partners.
Despite security concerns, the countries involved have continued to push
forward. For the
U.S.
, the
project offers a way to further isolate
Iran
,
which is trying to build its own gas pipeline to
Pakistan
. It
also could help deepen economic ties between
India
and
Pakistan
--
rival nations that
Washington
wants
to see cooperate more to help forge stability in the region, particularly
Afghanistan
.
Turkmenistan
, a
major supplier of natural gas, views the project as a way to reduce dependence
on
Russia
and
China
as
export markets. And
India
and
Pakistan
hope
Turkmenistan
's gas
will help meet their huge energy import needs.
On Wednesday, state-owned energy companies from
India
and
Pakistan
will
sign a 20-year agreement with
Turkmenistan
to
purchase up to 33 million cubic meters of gas per year via the pipeline, said
Muhammad Ejaz Chaudhry, secretary of
Pakistan
's
Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources.
The countries recently agreed at a meeting in
Pakistan
on
how much
Afghanistan
should get in transit fees, disagreements over which had been holding up a
gas-purchase agreement.
Afghanistan
also
will buy a small amount of the gas but has yet to reach an agreement with
Turkmenistan
.
The signing, which will take place in
Turkmenistan
, is
backed by the Asian Development Bank. The Manila-based multilateral lender is
funding the project and helped broker Wednesday's deal.
The
U.S.
isn't
playing a direct role in the negotiations but has supported the pipeline since
the 1990s, when a Unocal Corp.-led consortium entered negotiations with the
then-Taliban government.
It remains unclear how the project can progress given the Taliban insurgency,
which controls large swathes of southern
Afghanistan
and
parts of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. A separatist rebellion in
Pakistan
's
southwestern
Baluchistan
province, through which the
pipeline must also pass, further complicates the picture.
Andrew Neff, a Moscow-based senior energy analyst at IHS, a global consultancy,
said instability in Afghanistan means the pipeline -- estimated four years ago
to cost $7.6 billion to construct -- is unlikely to attract financing from
Western banks.
"The main hurdle is the security concerns in
Afghanistan
,"
Mr. Neff said.
The focus on the pipeline's geo-political significance is "threatening to
overtake the economic rationale of connecting suppliers with consumers,"
he said.
The
U.S.
is
trying to squeeze
Iran
to
give up its nuclear program by forcing countries like
India
to
reduce their purchases of Iranian crude oil. The
U.S.
has
promoted alternative sources of energy, signing a civilian nuclear deal with
India
and
pushing projects like the TAPI pipeline.
New Delhi
recently has begun to cut
back on Iranian crude purchases, under
U.S.
pressure to do so by the end of June or face limited sanctions. Two years ago,
India
pulled out of a gas pipeline project with
Iran
, also
after the
U.S.
asked
it to do so.
But
Pakistan
has
refused to pull out of the planned $1.5 pipeline with
Iran
, even
after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in March threatened economic
sanctions if it proceeded.
The country argues it needs to push both the
Iran
and
TAPI pipelines to meet a looming energy shortage. The
U.S.
refused to sign a civilian nuclear deal with
Pakistan
because of its history of nuclear proliferation.
"
Pakistan
can't
afford to withdraw from the project," Mr. Chaudhry said.
Turkmenistan
is
hoping the deal will allow it to find alternative customers for gas from its
massive Galkynysh field, the second-largest gas reserve in the world. The
country was long dependent on
Russia
,
which has cut back purchases in recent years amid the global economic downturn.
The Central Asian country is exporting to
China
via a
pipeline but is looking to diversify its markets further, said Mr. Neff.
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