Iran-India gas pipeline to overcome US sanctions
A senior Oil Ministry official warned of the possibility of the India-proposed consortium for constructing the
controversial Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline being subject to US sanctions.
Hadi Nejad-Hosseinian, deputy oil minister for international affairs said, however, that if the consortium uses
Iranian investment in its operations within Iran, the threat will be overcome.
"If India and Pakistan create a consortium under which operations within Iran are entrusted to the Iranian side, it
will not be subject to US sanctions," he said, adding that if the consortium decides to invest in Iran, the
threatened sanction will remain valid.
He said that gas price must be set in a way that Iran's financial interests are safeguarded, stressing that the
future price fluctuations will have to be taken into account in devising a price.
The official said the Indian side has proposed the establishment of two consortia, one to implement the project and
the other to exploit it.
"Based on the Indian proposal, Iran will play no role in marketing and sales of gas," he said without elaborating on
whether Tehran has accepted the proposal or not. Nejad-Hosseinian said that Iran has not offered to construct a
gas-fuelled refinery and a petrochemical complex in India in return for the purchase of gas.
He said reports indicating Iran's will to enter into other energy projects with India as a gas deal incentive are
untrue. Indian sources had reported earlier that Iran is planning to construct a gas-fuelled refinery and a
petrochemical complex in India using gas supplied through the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline.
New Delhi also said it has negated Tehran's proposal of two separate gas pipelines, one to India and another to
Pakistan, saying it did not address the country's security concern. Iran's suggestion for two separate pipelines is
reportedly a result of the cumulative gas demand of all three nations exceeding the proposed pipeline's conduit
capacity.
