Turkmenistan's pipe dream
Construction of the pipeline in Afghanistan is making tangible progress, but extending it into Pakistan and India remains unrealistic for political reasons
The Turkmenistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan–India (TAPI) pipeline is under construction in Afghanistan. Only 14km has been built, and industry sources say Ashgabat is financing the project itself, without any supply commitments. But this represents tangible progress for a pipeline that has been planned since the fall of the Soviet Union. But for significant political reasons, extending the pipeline to Pakistan and India is just as unrealistic as it was a decade ago. TAPI was born in the early 1990s, as newly independent Turkmenistan sought to develop new export routes for its vast gas reserves beyond Russia. Moscow refused to let Turkmenistan use its pipelines to export gas to Europe, instead buyi
Also in this section
7 January 2026
No longer can the energy source be considered a sidekick to oil in the Middle East and neither should it step aside for less convincing alternatives
7 January 2026
The global race for critical minerals has become a defining feature of energy geopolitics, presenting the ASEAN region with both opportunity and risk
7 January 2026
As global energy systems evolve to meet shifting demand and transition pressures, maintaining reliable hydrocarbon supply remains essential to energy security
6 January 2026
Cash will be needed to boost production by 30% to meet region’s rapidly rising power demand, executives told the inaugural Middle East Gas Conference in December






