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Turkmenistan signs gas sale pact with India, Pak

1,680-km TAPI pipeline will have capacity to carry 90 million cubic metres a day gas for a 30-year period

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Kicking-off work on the long discussed US-backed , India and its new energy partners today signed agreements that will pave way for laying of the 1,680-km line.

Turkmenistan, which holds more than 4% of the world's natural gas reserves, signed agreements to sell gas to India and Pakistan through the $7.6 billion pipeline at the of Avaza.

Describing signing of the (GSPA) as "no-ordinary event", Oil Minister S Jaipal Reddy said the signing was "a triumph of multilateralism, regional cooperation and economic integration".

The 1,680-km TAPI pipeline will have a capacity to carry 90 million cubic metres a day (mmcmd) gas for a 30-year period and will be operational in 2018.

India and Pakistan would get 38 mmcmd each, while the remaining 14 mcmd will be supplied to Afghanistan.

Besides Reddy, the GSPA, signed by national oil companies of the four nations, was witnessed by Turkmenistan Oil Minister B Nedirov, Pakistan's Petroleum Minister Asim Hussain and Afghanistan's Minister of Mines Wahidullah Shahrani.

"Without a doubt, the economic benefits of the TAPI gas pipeline will be immense for our energy-starved economies. The flow of natural gas will bring in industrial and economic development in our countries," Reddy said.

Stating that in an inter-connected and globalising world, economics shapes politics, he said: "It is our belief that the TAPI gas pipeline will transform the politics of this region".

"Hopefully, the spin-off benefits of this pipeline will encourage us to emphasise trade and investment issues over contentious political issues and enable us to build trust and confidence among ourselves as neighbours and partners in progress," he said in apparent reference to the frosty ties India has had with its neighbour Pakistan.

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