08-06-02 The leaders of Turkmenistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan signed
an agreement in Islamabad on 30 May 2002 on a gas pipeline project to
transport Turkmen natural gas to Pakistan through Afghanistan. The
agreement says that such a pipeline is "vital" to the interests of the
peoples of these countries.
It also says that work on a preliminary feasibility study of the
project will be carried out and that it will be financed by international
financial institutions. The parties to the agreement will choose an
international consortium that has experience of carrying out such
projects, and the pipeline will be built by, belong to and be used by that
consortium.
The following is the text of the agreement as published on 31 May:
Agreement between the government of Turkmenistan, the government of
Afghanistan and the government of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan on
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan oil and gas pipeline projects
The government of Turkmenistan (referred to below as the Turkmen side),
the government of Afghanistan (referred to below as the Afghan side) and
the government of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan (referred to below as
the Pakistani side), which are hereinafter referred to as the Parties,
acknowledging their cultural ties and common interests; genuinely desiring
to strengthen fraternal relations and cooperation between the Parties on
oil and gas pipeline projects; considering that the Parties are
interested:
-- in the construction and use of a gas pipeline by a corporate body
(hereinafter referred to as the Consortium) for the transportation of
natural gas from Turkmenistan to Pakistan via the territory of
Afghanistan, and
-- in carrying out a preliminary feasibility study (PFS) of the
construction of the gas pipeline by a corporate body (hereinafter referred
to as the Consultant), have agreed on the following:
Article 1
The Parties support the construction of a
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan gas pipeline, viewing it as vital to the
interests of the peoples of the countries of the region, and will
coordinate the joint activities necessary for carrying out the supply,
transportation and use of Turkmen natural gas.
Article 2
At the initial stage, the PFS will determine the economic
practicability of a Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan gas pipeline project
and form a basis for it (phase 1). Then, the possibility of extending the
gas pipeline to the third country or countries will be considered (phase
2).
In that case Pakistan will act as a link ensuring the uninterrupted
transportation of gas to the third countries and will receive payment for
the transportation of gas under an agreement between the Turkmen and
Pakistan sides. Pakistan will have the right to purchase gas for domestic
use or to pump its [local] gas into the pipeline if there is spare
capacity.
The Afghan side is to ensure to the uninterrupted delivery of Turkmen
natural gas from Turkmenistan to Pakistan and receive payment for gas
transportation under an agreement between the Turkmen andAfghan sides or
under other agreements concluded between the Parties.
Article 3
The sides have agreed to set up a supervisory committee to be headed by
the minister of mines and industries from the Afghan side, by the minister
of petroleum and natural resources of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
from the Pakistani side, and the minister of oil and gas and mineral
resources of Turkmenistan from the Turkmen side.
The committee will consist of three representatives from each side to
supervise the drawing up of PFS and consultations with each other about
the first and second phases of the project. During the making of PFS, the
members of the supervisory committee will hold consultations and meetings
on a regular basis. The supervisory committee is to present a progress
report on the pipeline project at a meeting of the heads of Afghanistan,
Pakistan and Turkmenistan in [the Turkmen capital] city of Ashgabat in
October 2002.
Article 4
The supervisory committee is to study the possibility of building a
road and a railway line and also a power transmission line and fibre optic
communication between the three countries.
Article 5
The Parties have agreed to choose a Consultant for the drawing up of
PFS through an international tender. The work will be financed by
international financial institutions.
Article 6
The Parties will help and present to the Consultant all available data
and technical information necessary for PFS; The Turkmen side will play a
leading role and inform the Parties about all stages of the [feasibility]
study and to hold consultations with the Pakistani and Afghan sides until
the Consultant finally defines the main terms of PFS.
Article 7
As part of this study, the Consultant may also study the possibility of
implementing the oil pipeline project from Turkmenistan to Gwadar
(Pakistan) via the territory of Afghanistan.
Article 8
The PFS will be a basis for a feasibility study and ensuing
intergovernmental agreements such as: - an agreement on the saleand
purchase of gas; - an agreement with the transit countries; - an agreement
on the gas pipeline; and other relevant accords.
Article 9
The Parties declare their support for and will make joint efforts to
attract an international Consortium that has experience of carrying out
such projects. The gas pipeline will be built by, belong to and be used by
the international Consortium.
Article 10
The Parties have agreed that Afghanistan enjoys a right of access to
the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan gas pipeline to export its [local]
natural gas as well as to take gas from this system for domestic use in
Afghanistan. The amounts of gas to be exported and received by Afghanistan
are to be agreed by the Parties in accordance with the results of PFS.
Article 11
The Parties guarantee the safety of the gas pipeline running through
their territories. The Parties acknowledge the importance of the adoption
of an international Convention and other relevant international legal
documents under UN aegisto guarantee the security and development of
pipeline systems.
The Afghan side is to make the necessary research on the basis of the
results of PFS in those parts of the area on its territory where it is
planned to carry out construction work on the
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan gas pipeline -- to detect mines,
unexploded rockets or other explosives, booby traps and other devices and
to safely remove and (or) blow them up.
The Parties will take all the necessary measures to ensure the security of
all foreign personnel who will be present in their territories to carry
out work to implement the gas pipeline project.
Article 12
Any changes or addenda to this agreement on the gas pipeline will be
made through separate tripartite protocols signed up by the Parties and
these will be integral part of this agreement.
Article 13
Disagreements concerning the interpretation and use of this agreement
are to be settled through talks and consultations between the Parties.
Article 14 This agreement comes into force after internal procedures
are completed and it is approved by the Parties. This agreement is valid
for three years and can be prolonged with the written consent of the
Parties six months before the expiry of the agreement.
This agreement, done in Turkmen, Dari, English and Russian in the city
of Islamabad on 30 May 2002 in three originals in each of these languages,
with one for each side. In the event of any different interpretation, the
text in English will prevail.
[Signed by] On behalf of the government of Turkmenistan, Saparmurat
Niyazov, the president of Turkmenistan. On behalf of the government of
Afghanistan, Hamed Karzai, the leader of the interim administration of
Afghanistan. On behalf of the government of Pakistan, Pervez Musharraf,
the president of Pakistan.