Devil Soul
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India no more lifeline as Nepal signs fuel pact with China
KATHMANDU - India has lost its long-standing status as Nepal’s sole fuel provider, after the Himalayan nation signed an agreement with China for the supply of petroleum products.
The agreement came after India stopped fuel and other items under the pretext of blockade of land routes from India due to unrest over the new constitution. “Nepal Oil Corporation (NOC) and China National United Fuel Corporation formalised a long-term commercial agreement in Beijing,” a senior Nepali bureaucrat said.
Under the agreement, the bureaucrat said that China will supply fuel at international rates, which Kathmandu might find cheaper than its imports from India. To begin with, China will fulfill at least a third of Nepal’s requirements. Nepal decided to look beyond India for fuel supply while the two nations were locked in a who-blinks-first game.
“Our officials were in talks with China since Tuesday,” the bureaucrat said. “From now on, we do not have to depend on one particular country for fuel,” the bureaucrat said when asked if China alone would be able to fulfill Nepal’s energy requirements. Reports from Nepal, however, said that the capacity of the highways from the north needs to be checked in order to ensure steady flow of supplies.
India no more lifeline as Nepal signs fuel pact with China
- INP
- October 29, 2015, 1:11 pm
KATHMANDU - India has lost its long-standing status as Nepal’s sole fuel provider, after the Himalayan nation signed an agreement with China for the supply of petroleum products.
The agreement came after India stopped fuel and other items under the pretext of blockade of land routes from India due to unrest over the new constitution. “Nepal Oil Corporation (NOC) and China National United Fuel Corporation formalised a long-term commercial agreement in Beijing,” a senior Nepali bureaucrat said.
Under the agreement, the bureaucrat said that China will supply fuel at international rates, which Kathmandu might find cheaper than its imports from India. To begin with, China will fulfill at least a third of Nepal’s requirements. Nepal decided to look beyond India for fuel supply while the two nations were locked in a who-blinks-first game.
“Our officials were in talks with China since Tuesday,” the bureaucrat said. “From now on, we do not have to depend on one particular country for fuel,” the bureaucrat said when asked if China alone would be able to fulfill Nepal’s energy requirements. Reports from Nepal, however, said that the capacity of the highways from the north needs to be checked in order to ensure steady flow of supplies.
India no more lifeline as Nepal signs fuel pact with China