ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Turkmenistan on Thursday agreed to speed up work on the Turkmenistan Afghanistan Pakistan India (TAPI) gas pipeline project, whose construction has remained stalled for years, the Pakistani energy ministry said.
The pipeline will link the energy-rich Central Asian country of Turkmenistan through Afghanistan to Pakistan and India, and is expected to carry 33 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas each year along a route stretching 1,800 km (1,125 miles) from Galkynysh, the world's second-biggest gas field, to the Indian city of Fazilka near the Pakistan border.
The Afghan stretch of the pipeline will run from the northwestern border with Turkmenistan, south through the western city of Herat to Kandahar near the border with Pakistan.
Work on the project has been stalled due to differences over price review and delivery points.
As per the original deal, Pakistan, Afghanistan and India would have 15% share of gas, while Turkmenistan would get 85%. Under the existing gas sale-purchase agreement, the gas delivery point is the Afghanistan-Turkmenistan border, which Pakistan wants moved to the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
“Both sides agreed to speed up the TAPI gas pipeline project,” the energy ministry said in a statement after Turkmenistan Ambassador Atadjan Movlamov called on Pakistan’s Interim Federal Minister for Energy Muhammad Ali today, Thursday.
Ali underscored the importance of gas for the economy of Pakistan.
"With increasing energy demand of the country, such projects need aggressive approach," he was quoted as saying. “Progress on this project is in the right direction and will bear fruit. In this context, host government agreement (HGA) is expected to be concluded, with mutual consensus, in October.”
The minister said frequent meetings of the working group on the Turkmenistan Afghanistan Pakistan (TAP) electricity project would also be held to expedite the project.
In recent months, Pakistan, hit by a shortage of imported gas, has cut power output, hurting the economy just as it reels from soaring inflation and a sliding currency.