India ready to invest $15bn in
Iranian Projects
NEW DELHI: India is ready to
invest more than $15.2 billion to build projects in Iran including taking up
full-scale development of Chabahar Port if Tehran offers better terms including
cheaper gas, Shipping Minister Nitin Gadkari said on Wednesday.
India is one of the few countries
that continued trade links with Iran, isolated by Western countries against its
nuclear programme. New Delhi is Tehran’s second biggest oil client after
Beijing.
“We are ready to make a huge
investment in Iran and this is mainly linked to gas pricing offered by Iran Gas
price is a crucial issue,” Mr Gadkari told a news conference.
Days before the historic nuclear
deal between Tehran and the West in July, President Hassan Rouhani offered
India a greater role in infrastructure projects including overall development
of Chabahar port.
With easing of sanctions, India is hoping to play a greater role in
Iran’s development
India hopes to take a decision on
Iran’s latest offer by early October after obtaining reports from other
ministries including petroleum, chemical and fertiliser and steel by Monday,
Shipping Secretary Rajive Kumar said.
The port of Chabahar in southeast
Iran is central to India’s efforts to circumvent Pakistan and open up a route
to landlocked Afghanistan where it has developed close security ties and
economic interests.
The port can also serve as a
gateway to the resource-rich countries of Central Asia.
In May, Mr Gadkari and his
Iranian counterpart, Abbas Ahmad Akhoundi, signed an $85 million deal for India
to lease two existing berths at the port and use them as multi-purpose cargo
terminals.
With the easing of sanctions, New
Delhi is hoping for a greater and stronger role in Iran’s development by taking
up projects including building urea and petrochemical projects using gas produced
in the OPEC-member nation. India is seeking gas at $1.5 per million British
thermal units compared to $2.95 offered by Iran for building a urea plant
there, Mr Gadkari said.
He said building a plant in Iran
and importing urea from there to India would help save a part of the Rs800bn
($12.13bn) in subsidies and halve the prices for farmers.
“If the gas price is reasonable
then all departments in India can together take up projects in the special
economic zone there and investment will be more than Rs1 trillion,” he said.