September 18 Issue




COVER
 

Above Pain and Glory
The Olympic Games are not just about victory. They are about the tragedy, the struggle and the humanity of ordinary people...

Sydney Waits...
Top Stars To Watch
The Gift Of Gold

 
STATES
 

Battle For Bengal
As political violence engulfs the state, Jyoti Basu finds Mamata Banerjee's offensive and the threat of Central intervention serious enough to reconsider his decision to bow out as chief minister after 23 years.

 
STATES
 

Lodged In A Mess
This time Jayalalitha is charged with funding the purchase of two hotels in England.

 
Columns
 

Fifth Column
by Tavleen Singh
Villages Of Woes

 
 

Kautilya
by Jairam Ramesh
Pipedreams To Pipelines

 
  Politically Correct
by P Chidambaram
Order In The House

 
 

Right Angle
by Swapan Dasgupta
Responding To A Gesture

 
 

Flipside
by Dilip Bobb
Ill Timed

 
Other stories
  Cyber Chatter  
  Interview  
  Cinema  
  Crime  
  Nation  
  States  
  Health  
  The Arts  
  Business  
NewsNotes
 

Ill Omens
Before Yashwant Sinha set off for the US for treatment...

 
  Like Shishya, Like Guru
Naveen Patnaik is taking lessons in Oriya
 
 

Victory Bid
S.S. Dhindsa was all set to leave for Sydney...

more...

 
 



 
  Home  
 

KAUTILYA
Pipedreams To Pipelines

Iran and Pakistan are keen on an Iran-India gas pipeline-but we are sceptical

By Jairam Ramesh

India and Iran share many civilisational affinities. Now, the Iranians are pushing a project that will bind the two countries closer together. A few weeks ago, an Indian team of officials was in Teheran where the idea of a natural gas pipeline from Iran to India came up for discussion. But we are very reluctant since such a pipeline will have to come through Pakistan. Iran has almost 15 per cent of the world's gas reserves, next only to those of Russia, and is also uniquely situated to act as a transit point for the abundant Caspian and central Asian gas.

The Iranians are worried about the growing Talibanisation of Pakistan and the impact that could have on their country. As it is, they are very concerned with Afghanistan. Their belief is that if there are projects like the pipeline venture, Pakistan will be forced to be moderate and sensitive to world opinion. They see greater economic interaction with neighbours as the only way to keep religious extremists at bay in Pakistan. This is a profound transformation in Iran's own thinking and reflects its growing desire to rejoin the mainstream. Of course, a financially strapped Iran could do with the extra cash from gas exports.

The pipeline will be approximately 2,000 km long and will originate in the South Pars field in the Persian Gulf, go through about 700-800 km of Pakistani territory all the way to Multan to join Pakistan's gas grid and then deliver gas at the northern or southern Rajasthan border. This gas can be used to generate power, as boiler fuel in industry, as cooking fuel in cities and for producing petrochemicals. The pipeline would cost about $2-3 billion (Rs 9,000-13,500 crore) and would deliver anywhere between 60 and 100 million cubic metres of gas per day (MCMD) to India and one-third that amount to Pakistan. The current consumption of gas in India is around 60 MCMD.

Our main concern is that Pakistan will disrupt supplies at will and hold us to ransom. This fear is legitimate. Pakistan will earn about $500-700 million per year as transit fees. This is a considerable amount for a bankrupt economy. But even assuming that it would be willing to forego this for the nobler cause of squeezing India, there are other ways of keeping Pakistan in check. A tripartite contract could, for example, provide for explicit penalties to be paid by Pakistan in case of disruption of supplies. R.K. Pachauri of the Delhi-based Tata Energy Research Institute has formulated a detailed securities package to safeguard India's interests. What is as noteworthy as Iran's enthusiasm for the project is the interest shown by General Pervez Musharraf himself and the readiness with which Pakistan has talked about "guarantees" with the Iranians without linking the pipeline to Kashmir.

INDUS WATERS TREATY: There is an earlier model for the gas pipeline-the historic Indus Waters Treaty that was signed in September 1960 by Ayub Khan and Jawaharlal Nehru. Since then, that treaty has survived two major wars and numerous smaller conflicts. The treaty was undoubtedly amenable to a neat technical solution but it was made possible because of American support and because of the World Bank's sustained involvement between 1952 and 1960. The presence of the World Bank and American companies would be essential to make the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline a reality.

The overland pipeline from Iran would serve the energy needs of north India. For peninsular India, LNG (liquified natural gas) is the preferred option. Here, gas is liquified at source, transported via cryogenic tankers and regassified at the point of delivery. LNG terminals are now coming up at Dahej, Pipavav, Jamnagar, Dabhol and Kochi on the west coast and at Ennore and Kakinada on the east coast. We could sustain an LNG supply of about 10-12 million tonnes per year (40-48 MCMD) which, if used entirely for power, would generate 10,000-12,000 MW annually. The other way to transport gas across countries is through deep-sea pipelines. In the early 1990s we were starry-eyed about a mega-project to bring gas from Oman. Mercifully, that proposal is now dead.

Noted Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid, in his vastly engrossing book Taliban published very recently, has described both the promise of and pitfalls in pipeline diplomacy in our region. Today, India's participation in this new "Great Game", as Rashid calls it, appears highly unlikely. But given a new and bold strategic vision, we can emerge as a major player as well. What we need to do is push for a trilateral group of non-official experts to work out operational details for the pipeline project fully realising that the project would be as much an exercise in politics as in economics. The non-official dimension is important to kickstart the process because officials very often have frozen mindsets.

(The author is with the Congress party. These are his personal views.)

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     METRO TODAY
  MetroScape  
   


The Kitsch Queen
Anjolie Ela Menon seems happy enough to be caught by the high-riding kitsch wave sweeping the subcontinent.
more...

Looking Glass
Delhi: Film Festival

Mumbai: Restaurant

Munnar: Resort

Pune: Store

 
    Web Exclusives

COLUMN  

The Government should encash at least a part of its stake in LIC and GIC before its too late, suggests INDIA TODAY associate Editor V. Shankar Aiyar in Au Contraiyar.


 
DESPATCHES  


With the failure rate rising to a dismal 70 per cent, the Uttar Pradesh High School and Intermediate Board has some accounting to do. INDIA TODAY Special Correspondent Subhash Mishra reports on the gross irregularities in
Despatches.

 
EXTRAS

Full coverages
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» 1971: The Untold Story
» Veerappan Strikes Again
» The Tiger Catastrophe
» The SriLankan crisis
» The Kashmir jigsaw
»The Nepal Gameplan

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