Contrarian
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2006
- Messages
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What contorted map are you looking at? How and where does Saudi Arabia come in the picture? They'v got nothing to do with this.If the oil is taken from the Turkish port, it'll have to pass through to some port in Yemen perhaps, and then onto India to escape Pakistani waters for sure. If this is the case, it will have to Pass through Saudi Arabia.
All the ship might need to do is port in Yemen, nothing else. India is not using Yemen's land for transporting oil or gas over it. There is nothing to be paid except for port charges.
Again, if Turkey is the one PROPOSING this idea, you'd think that theyd have worked out some form of tariff that would be acceptable to India.Both those countries, even Turkey are going to be charging extorionate costs for passage of oil through their country.
If it passes through the Persian Gulf, Pakistani waters is not such a small space, and most of the mouth of the Persian Gulf would be Pakistani waters, the rest Omani waters. There's more taxation there. It's definitely not international waters. All the Persian Gulf is not international waters.
And the ships DONT have to pass through the Persian Gulf. How the hell did you come up with that?
And even if they had to, they DONT have to cross Pakistani territorial waters. Please look up as to how far from the coast the territorial waters extend. WHich again is DIFFERENT from the Pakistani EEZ, and even Pakistan's EEZ does not cover the mouth of the Persian Gulf.
Dont post what you like as facts here.
Well, if the aim is for energy diversification, then this might not be a great concern if the charge is not much above what it is currently costing India(not the IPI line, the current cost would be a benchmark).As for it being cheaper using this searoute than IPI or TAP, that's a joke. The whole point of the pipeline is to supply a continuous, cheap, efficient energy to Pakistan. If tankers and trucks were better they'd have used them. The Turks might say it's cheaper to convince your population, but reality would suggest otherwise.