Pakistan PM flies to Moscow to advance pipeline project
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[February 23, 2022]
By Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistani Prime
Minister Imran Khan left for Moscow on Wednesday to push for the
construction of a long-delayed, multi-billion-dollar gas pipeline to be
built in collaboration with Russian companies, an official said.
Khan's trip to meet President Vladimir Putin and discuss issues
including economic cooperation comes hours after a number of Western
nations hit Russia with new sanctions for its military deployment into
parts of eastern Ukraine.
"Both countries are eager to launch the project at the earliest,"
Pakistan's energy ministry spokesman told Reuters about the Pakistan
Stream gas pipeline. He confirmed that Energy Minister Hammad Azhar is
accompanying Khan on the visit.
The 1,100 km (683 mile)-long pipeline, also known as the North-South gas
pipeline, was initially agreed to in 2015 and was to be financed by both
Moscow and Islamabad, using a Russian company to construct it..
In an interview ahead of his trip, Khan had expressed concern about the
situation in Ukraine and the possibility of new sanctions and their
effect on Islamabad's budding cooperation with Moscow.
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Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan speaks during an interview with
Reuters in Islamabad, Pakistan June 4, 2021. REUTERS/Saiyna Bashir/File
Photo
It is unclear how the latest
sanctions will affect the project, which would deliver imported
Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) from Karachi on the Arabian Sea coast to
power plants in the northeastern province of Punjab.
The project is important for Pakistan - particularly the power
sector - as the country's dependence on imported LNG grows in the
face of dwindling indigenous gas supplies.
The pipeline project has already suffered delays because of earlier
sanctions.
"This North-South pipeline suffered, one of the reasons...was the
companies we were negotiating with, turned out that U.S. had applied
sanctions on them," Khan told Russia Today on Tuesday.
"So, the problem was to get a company that wasn’t sanctioned," he
said of the project.
(Reporting by Gibran Peshimam in Islamabad and Syed Raza Hassan in
Karachi, Editing by William Maclean)
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