Oil minister visits Pakistan for talks on Iran pipeline
Oil minister Murli Deora was to hold talks in Pakistan this week on a seven-billion dollar transnational gas pipeline from Iran, a senior oil ministry official said on Tuesday.
Deora's three-day visit is the first contact between the rival South Asian states since the new coalition government took office in Islamabad last month.
He was also to explore the possibility of India exporting diesel to Pakistan, the official said.
Meetings between the two oil ministers starting Wednesday will focus on resolving differences over transit and transportation fees to be levied by Pakistan for allowing the pipeline through its territory, said the official who declined to be named.
While "transit fees will cover the security of the pipeline," expected to cross Pakistan's volatile Balochistan province, "transportation tariff is the normal fee charged for the passage of fuel," he said.
Islamabad is seeking 0.493 dollars per million British thermal unit as transit fee, while New Delhi has offered 0.15 dollars per unit or 60 million dollars a year, he said.
Deora's Pakistan trip comes a week ahead of Iran's president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad day-long stopover in New Delhi.
Talks on the 2,600-kilometre (1,615-mile) Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline began in 1994 but have been stalled by tensions between India and Pakistan.
Energy-hungry India, which imports more than 70 per cent of its energy needs, has been racing to secure new supplies of oil and gas from abroad besides ramping up domestic production to sustain booming economic growth.
"All the countries are keen that India participates in the project," the official said.
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