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India accelerates Iranian port project after US-Iran thaw

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India is sending a team to Iran to speed up work on a port that will provide access to resource-rich Central Asia and Afghanistan, officials said moving quickly to take advantage of a thaw in Iran's relations with the West.

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 which India is partly financing will also be another gateway to Iran itself for Indian commerce.

Work has been slow on expanding berthing facilities and container terminals partly because India has been reluctant to press ahead too enthusiastically for fear of upsetting the US keen to isolate Iran over its nuclear ambitions.

On Monday just after Iran sealed an initial accord with six powers including the US to limit its nuclear programme in exchange for the easing of some sanctions, Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh met Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Ebrahim Rahimpour to discuss economic opportunities.

The Iranian official was in New Delhi on a pre-arranged visit but as news of the deal in Geneva broke the talks turned to ways to fast-track the long-running port project.

"For us, Chabahar is a strategic necessity otherwise we don't have access to Afghanistan and central Asia, ''a foreign ministry official said.

Pakistan loath to see growing Indian influence in Afghanistan does not allow India to send goods through its territory to Afghanistan and has only recently begun to allow a trickle of Afghan exports to cross through to India.

The ministry official said while India's involvement in the port development was not strictly under the international sanctions that had been imposed on Iran any improvement in Iran's ties with the West would build confidence in the project.

The Geneva agreement certainly opens up the space to pursue this at greater pace.

India has committed $100 million to upgrading facilities at the port after spending $100 million on building a 220-km (140-mile) road in a dangerous stretch of western Afghanistan to link up with Chabahar. The port on the Gulf of Oman is 72 km (44 mile) from Pakistan's deep-water Gwadar port, which China has built as part of a plan to open up an energy and trade corridor from the Gulf'' across Pakistan to western China.

Both India and China have been trying to secure energy supplies for their growing economies investing in projects abroad and offering engineering and financial assistance in a race that extends from Africa to Latin America.

Chabahar is the first foreign port that India is directly involved in developing. India is struggling to modernise its own congested ports.

China on the other hand has helped build a string of ports in foreign countries including Gwadar and Sri Lanka's Hambantota port.

"Chabahar is going to see more Indian attention over the next few months, ''said Shashank Joshi who specialises in the Middle East and South Asia at the London-based Royal United Services Institute.

India was caught by surprise over the nuclear deal and it does not want to be caught sleeping if a US-Iran thaw develops quickly.

A team from the state-run Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust which manages India's largest container port near Mumbai and the Kandla Port Trust will travel to Chabahar in the next few weeks and stay a month for a technical and commercial assessment.

"We have an opportunity here. The port has a strategic location,"said an official at the Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust.

"But we also need to see the viability. There are not many ships going there at the moment. We have to make projections about traffic revenue."

The port has the capacity to handle 2.5 million tonne a year which Iran would like to increase to 12.5 million tonnes. Iran has made the area adjacent to Chabahar town a free trade zone in the hope of spurring growth in its poor southeast.

The Indian operators plan to set up a special mechanism to finance part of the port's infrastructure and they want the Iranians to give it long-term rights to operate it.

Iran hasn't given any indication about that yet and according to one Indian official, it wants more Indian finance to develop the port as well as rail and road links.

"It seems the strategic ramifications for projects like Chabahar are still being puzzled out by all sides. Short-term its easier to move ahead but long-term less clear," said Andrew Small, a specialist at German Marshall Fund of the United States.

India accelerates Iranian port project after US-Iran thaw - Business Today
 
Hurry up. This could be in use as a gateway to central Asia much sooner than one may have thought!
 
why should iran need indian money to develop its ports.they are very oil rich.
 
why should iran need indian money to develop its ports.they are very oil rich.

Not very. For one thing, they haven't been able to sell their oil, due to international sanctions. That has really crippled their economy. And two, money is not the only factor, it's also expertise in the relevant areas. Simply throwing money at a spot will not make an industry grow up there. That's why we see Japan investing in India's high speed rails, China investing in roads and rails in many countries and so on, because they have high expertise in those fields. We probably have more experience in ports and harbours than Iranian domestic companies, so...
 
This is going to be a very strategic path way to Afghanistan and central Asia for India in future
 
have been hearing this sh1t for years now.
Indian foreign ministery should stop making noise until we ACTUALLY start sending goods to Afghanistan via chahabar port and make some significant profit from our investment in developing port and roads. Till then STFU :mad:
 
why should iran need indian money to develop its ports.they are very oil rich.

Its not so much money that Iran needs from India; its the expertise.

Chabahar has a great potential for Iran. Not just as a Transhipment Port for Cargoes to and from Afghanistan and CARs. But for Iran's own cargo shipments. Its clear of the Persian Gulf region and the Straits of Hormuz which can be a hot-spot for Iran; given its less-than-friendly relationship with the countries across the Khaleej.

My view is that Iran itself needs the usage of Chah Bahar in the longer run. And therefore has the largest stake in its full operationalisation.
 
Not very. For one thing, they haven't been able to sell their oil, due to international sanctions. That has really crippled their economy. And two, money is not the only factor, it's also expertise in the relevant areas. Simply throwing money at a spot will not make an industry grow up there. That's why we see Japan investing in India's high speed rails, China investing in roads and rails in many countries and so on, because they have high expertise in those fields. We probably have more experience in ports and harbours than Iranian domestic companies, so...

Good explanation

On Topic> Hope things go as planned.
 
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