India will be attending tripartite talks on the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline project, that has been opposed by the US due to Tehran's involvement, after a long time as it had stayed away from discussions while a caretaker government was in power in Pakistan late last year.
After the Pakistan People's Party-led government assumed office in March, Indian Petroleum Minister Murli Deora had travelled to Islamabad for talks on the IPI and Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline projects.
Ahead of the meeting in Tehran, Pakistan's Steering Committee on the pipeline project will meet here on July 17 to review the status of the gas transit fee to be paid by India for transporting Iranian gas across Pakistani territory.
Finance secretary Farrukh Qayyum, Federal Board of Revenue chairman Abdullah Yousuf, Planning Commission deputy chairman Salman Farooqui and foreign secretary Salman Bashir will attend the meeting, a senior petroleum ministry official told the Daily Times newspaper.
The Steering Committee earlier met on January two and approved the draft Gas Sales Purchase Agreement (GSPA) with Iran for the IPI project.
The Steering Committee is expected to review the draft GSPA and the financial impact of the IPI project on Pakistan's economy. The pipeline is expected to bring benefits worth $2 billion for Pakistan's economy.
The official said Iran had invited Pakistan to attend the tripartite meeting in Tehran though the date for the meet had not yet been finalised. The date will be finalised after the meeting of the Steering Committee on July 17.
It is expected that the meeting in Tehran will be held in the last week of July, the official said. Indian and Pakistani officials, after holding a meeting in India last month, said that differences between the two countries on the transit fee have been resolved.
However, the final outcome regarding the gas transit fee is still awaited, the official said. Pakistan and India are expected to discuss the gas transit fee issue in the Tehran meeting. The two countries have reportedly agreed on a transit fee of 30 cents per mmbtu.
Another Pakistani official said Iran had welcomed India's stance on the IPI project and urged New Delhi and Islamabad to move ahead on the venture as it was needed by both countries due to their rising demand for energy.