9 Dec 2022 10:36

Pakistan to import LPG from Turkmenistan via Afghanistan

ASHGABAT. Dec 9 (Interfax) - The government of Pakistan, facing a gas shortage on the cusp of winter, has worked out a plan to import liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) overland from Turkmenistan through Afghanistan, Pakistan Today reported on Thursday.

The customs office in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan, after consultations with stakeholders, sent a plan to the Federal Board of Revenue to import LPG across the Chaman border, the paper said, citing sources. The federal government is ready to take the big step of importing LPG from Turkmenistan and will allow entry of tanker trucks, the sources said.

Afghan haulers plan to drive empty Pakistani tanker trucks across the Chaman border to the border with Turkmenistan in Torghuni to fill them with LPG. They will then drive back to Chaman and hand the trucks over to Pakistani haulers, who will deliver the gas to the point of destination in Pakistan.

The documents cited by Pakistan Today lay out three plans: immediate, short-term and long-term. Under the first, imports will begin immediately, while the short-term plan will require six to eight months and the long-term plan, which calls for setting up a station to load LPG into Pakistani fuel trucks, will take one year.

LPG is a blend of light hydrocarbons from oil-bearing formations that are in a gaseous state at room temperature and liquefy when cooled or under pressure. LPG is the highest quality product of processing associated petroleum gas. As a motor fuel, LPG has certain advantages when used in automobiles with internal combustion engines, providing more power and burning cleaner.