TEHRAN (FNA)- Pakistans Petroleum and Natural Resources Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasiis slated to arrive in Tehran on Sunday to meet senior Iranian officials over the accomplishment of the under-construction multi-billion-dollar Iran-Pakistan (IP) gas pipeline projected to carry natural gas from Iran to its energy hungry Eastern neighbor.
The Pakistani oil minister will head a high-ranking delegation, including his deputy Abed Saeed and Head of Pakistans Gas System Company Mobin Solat as well as several other senior officials, during the visit to Tehran.
Khaqan Abbasi and his accompanying delegation are currently in Qatar and are negotiating with the Arab countrys energy officials over the import of gas from that country as well as price and payment terms.
On Thursday, a senior Pakistani energy official said that Islamabad and Tehran are set to map out a strategy for the Iran-Pakistan pipeline.
The unnamed official from Pakistans Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources told the Islamabad-based The News daily that the two sides would exchange views on finishing the IP gas pipeline in Tehran on December 9.
Iran and Pakistan officially inaugurated the construction phase of a gas pipeline project in March which is due to take Irans rich gas reserves to the energy-hungry South Asian nation.
The project kicked off in a ceremony attended by former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his former Pakistani counterpart Asif Ali Zardari at the two countries' shared border region in Iran's Southeastern city of Chabahar.
The 2700-kilometer long pipeline was to supply gas for Pakistan and India which are suffering a lack of energy sources, but India has evaded talks. In 2011, Iran and Pakistan declared they would finalize the agreement bilaterally if India continued to be absent in the meeting.
Iran has already constructed more than 900 kilometers of the pipeline on its soil.
According to the project proposal, the pipeline will begin from Iran's Assalouyeh Energy Zone in the South and stretch over 1,100 km through Iran. In Pakistan, it will pass through Baluchistan and Sindh but officials now say the route may be changed if China agrees to the project.