Friday, April 26, 2024 | Shawwal 16, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Kabul’s 30-year pipe dream could bring power, industry

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Rod Nickel & Rupam Jain -


Afghanistan is pressing ahead with plans to turn natural gas from an $8 billion pipeline into economic development, with projects ranging from fertiliser plants to power generation, but first it needs to start construction. The TAPI pipeline — named after the countries involved, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India — was first proposed three decades ago. The problem of crossing war-ravaged Afghanistan is a major reason it has not been built.


Surveying work is finally under way in Afghanistan’s western province of Herat, with construction planned to start later in the autumn. Obstacles loom, however, starting with convincing donors to fund Afghanistan’s 5 per cent share of the cost and attracting private investors.


“They’re thinking, ‘Why a 30-year project that has not come into practice will be able to fully function in a few years?’ There is still that resistance, that maybe we will not be able to implement on time,” said Afghanistan’s acting minister of mines and petroleum, Nargis Nehan.


The Taliban militant group has pledged support for TAPI, but security remains a concern.


TAPI will transport 33 billion cubic metres of gas a year along an 1,800 km route from Turkmenistan’s Galkynysh, the world’s second-biggest gas field, to Fazilka in northwest India.


Afghanistan’s share, five billion cubic metres annually, would meet a huge need for the country, which relies on imported electricity and faces frequent power shortages.


The Asian Development Bank (ADB), which is financing Afghanistan’s contribution to TAPI’s cost, and the World Bank are conducting for Kabul a feasibility study into generating electricity from the gas and using it to supply fertiliser and petrochemical plants, said Samuel Tumiwa, the ADB’s country director.


A gas distribution system in Herat, Afghanistan’s third-largest city, could also pipe gas directly to homes for heating and generate electricity for plants to process juice and nuts, he said. “This opens up the possibility of Herat as an industrial city,” Tumiwa said.


The priority of Afghanistan’s government-owned power utility Da Afghanistan Breshna Sherkat (DABS), is producing power, and it is examining where it should build a power plant to convert TAPI gas, said the utility’s chief executive officer, Aman Ghalib. — Reuters


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