Prime Minister Narendra Modi gifts oil line to Nepal
New Delhi: In a move to deepen the economic ties with Nepal, India will build a 81-km pipeline from Motihari in Bihar to the Himalayan nation to supply petrol, diesel and ATF.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi signalled India’s willingness to build the Rs 200-crore pipeline to supply fuel during his visit to Kathmandu, the first by an Indian Prime Minister in 17 years. He said pipeline will be built to transport oil products to Nepal.
Nepal is dependent on India for meeting all of its fuel requirement. Petrol, diesel, domestic LPG and jet fuel (ATF) are currently trucked from Indian Oil Corp’s (IOC) depot at Raxaul in Bihar to Nepal.
In 2006, a 41-km pipeline from Raxaul to Amlekhgunj in Nepal was proposed for transportation of the fuel. The pipeline was to be funded by the IOC and Nepal Oil Corp (NOC). But the project never took off as Nepal refused to fund its share of cost.
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IOC in the meanwhile has decided to shift its oil storage depot from Raxaul to Motihari and the pipeline now proposed will be laid from Motihari to Amlekhgunj.
“It is not a very big pipeline but we have to secure statutory clearances from authorities in India as well as Nepal before work on the pipeline can begin,” a senior IOC official said.
The Raxaul-Amlekhgunj project was to cost about Rs 100 crore excluding the cost of land acquisition and the new line would cost almost double of that, he added. Nepal’s commerce minister Sunil Bahadur Thapa had raised the issue when he met the oil minister Dharmendra Pradhan on July 30.