19 Apr 2024
Wednesday 9 November 2016 - 10:35
Story Code : 238410

Why Iran and India are getting closer

The National Interest| Alex Vatanka: The last few weeks has seen a flurry of important announcements in Iranian-Indian relations. It is usually the commercial transactions that capture most of the headlines, but the potential for closer ties between these two states runs much deeper.

In fact, both Tehran and Delhi have long eyed each other as befitting strategic partners that together can link up the subcontinent and west Asia in ways unseen before. And now the promise of a couple of major energy and transportation projects can provide the much-delayed impetus to push ahead.

Post-Sanctions

The lifting of much of the international sanctions regime on Iran following its July 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers removed a key obstacle in Tehrans efforts to free itself from global economic isolation. While it is Irans growing dealings with Western states and companies that the media attention is typically fixed on, Tehrans wooing of Asian states such as India is no less momentous.

Steps are presently being taken to clear the path of large-scale commercial tie-ins. For example, it emerged on 1 November that after much delay, Delhi has finally paid Iran $6 billion in outstanding debt. The debt was for Indian oil imports, which Delhi argued it could not pay due to global banking sanctions on Tehran.

The Iranians, never much convinced about how hard Delhi was sincerely trying to reimburse them, nonetheless didnt let the issue to cloud their long-view on India.

Meanwhile, it also emerged on 1 November that an Indian bank was one of only three foreign banks (the others from Oman and South Korea) to open a branch in Iran. Elsewhere, Air India has announced that it will re-launch direct flights to Tehran from Delhi. The last direct flight service between the two countries had come to an end in 1994.

But among the latest batch of announcements, one stood out. It was the news that Iranian and Indian negotiators are said to be close to signing a major energy deal by March 2017. The deal is about Farzad B, a major offshore Iranian natural gas field in the Persian Gulf, which was discovered by an Indian consortium in 2008.

Ever since its discovery, negotiations have stalled around commercial terms for the fields development, a lag that was exacerbated by the tightening of international sanctions on Iran in the 2010-2013 period.

During Prime Minister Modis May 2016 visit to Tehran, the Indians pushed hard to receive rights to operate the field. They argued they do not want to be just end-users of the extracted gas and oil from the field.

For Iran to give the Indians operating rights would enable a tight strategic partnership between one of the worlds biggest energy exporters and one of the biggest energy importers. Final details are yet to be released but it would be a significant development should there in fact be an agreement on Farzad B by early next year.

From Irans perspective, making a country like India which is Irans second largest oil market after China - a stakeholder in its economy is equal to securing political insurance.

The Iranians were both surprised and aghast at how readily Asian states such as India were willing to go hand in hand with Western powers to punish Tehran for its controversial nuclear agreement. The big foreign commercial deals currently pursued by the government of President Hassan Rouhani are significantly motivated by a desire to make it much harder in the future to forge international consensus to sanction Iran.

The Sudden Rush

Lifting of international sanctions no doubt has played its role in pushing things along. But there is more to it. For one, the Indians do not want to fall behind the likes of China, South Korea, Japan and the Europeans who in the droves are looking to cut long-term commercial deals with the Iranians.

In fact, Indian reports claim that Tehran had given Delhi an ultimatum and the Indians feared that the Iranians would give the Farzad B project to another foreign investor unless a suitable financial package was put on the table to develop the field. Iranian oil minister Bijan Zangeneh had complained that successive Indian proposals had proven inadequate and that more Indian money is needed for the project to go ahead.

But Irans agenda with India is much bigger than just one gas field. Back in May, 12 agreements were signed between Modi and Rouhani. The biggest deal was a $500 million commitment by India to develop the port of Chabahar, Irans only deep-water port on the Indian Ocean.

India says it is a willing partner. Dharmendra Pradhan, Indias Minister of Petroleum, said in April that his country is also interested in building a liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant in Chabahar, which if carried out would represent Irans first LNG facility. This is a huge step for Iran, a country that has the worlds largest natural gas reserves but has struggled for years to make itself into a world-class exporter of gas like its neighbors such as Russia, Qatar and Turkmenistan.

Iran is also interested in turning Chabahar into a key petrochemicals hub with production and export facilities. Moving away from mostly relying on the export of crude oil to value-added petrochemicals is a big part of Tehrans plans for a more self-sufficient but also diversified economy.
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