Differences over the price of natural gas to be imported through the Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) pipeline persisted today, but the three countries agreed to appoint an international consultant to look into the issue. |
"The three countries have agreed to appoint an international consultant to look into the pricing of gas," Petroleum Secretary MS Srinivasan told reporters after talks held by the three countries. |
Iranian Deputy Oil Minister MH Nejad Hossenian said all sides insisted on the importance of the project and further talks would be held based on the consultant's report. |
The consultant, to be appointed by the three countries, would submit its report in a month's time, after which government officials would meet again in Tehran. Pakistan Oil Secretary Ahmed Waqar said Pakistan and India agreed with each other on the issue and were looking at a price affordable and reasonable for domestic markets. |
"We are pursuing a bilateral (Iran-Pakistan) pipeline and a trilateral (IPI) pipeline in a parallel manner. If, for any reason, India does not join the IPI project, Pakistan will go ahead with the bilateral project subject to the price being affordable," he said. |
Sources said an international consultant was needed because there were substantial differences between buyers and sellers on transportation and gas-processing costs. |
The tripartite expert committee, which was formed yesterday to look into the pricing issue, failed to resolve differences, with Iran insisting on a transmission cost of $1.2 per million British thermal unit, and India and Pakistan suggesting one-fourth of this cost. |
On gas processing, Iran said $0.4 per mbtu would be charged, but the buyers said $0.2 was a reasonable price, sources said. Tehran has remained adamant on its crude-oil-price linked formula, which, at $60 a barrel Brent crude price, translates into a price of $7.2 per mbtu "" 60 per cent more than what India was willing to pay. |
Sources said Iran wanted a price equivalent to 10 per cent of the ruling Brent crude oil price, plus a fixed cost of $1.2 per mbtu. At $60 per barrel "" the average Brent price during recent times "" this translates into a price of $7.2 per mbtu at the Iran-Pakistan border. Added to this would be the cost of transporting the gas through Pakistan. |
New Delhi, however, is willing to pay no more than $4.25 per mbtu for gas delivered through the 2,100-km line at its border, they said. |