Pakistan PM says hopeful of progress on multibillion-dollar oil refinery during Saudi crown prince’s visit

An overview shows tankers parked outside a local oil refinery in the Pakistan's port city of Karachi on February 22, 2011. (AFP/File)
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Updated 28 October 2022
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Pakistan PM says hopeful of progress on multibillion-dollar oil refinery during Saudi crown prince’s visit

  • Islamabad and Riyadh agreed on $11 billion refinery and petrochemical complex in 2019
  • Pakistan is also expected to devise a new petroleum policy ahead of crown prince’s visit

KARACHI: Pakistan is hopeful of a breakthrough in the financing of a multibillion-dollar oil refinery project during an upcoming highly anticipated visit of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Friday. 

Islamabad and Riyadh signed seven investment agreements worth $21 billion during the first official visit of the Saudi crown prince in February 2019. The mega investment included a $10 billion Aramco oil refinery and a $1 billion petrochemical complex in the southwestern Pakistani port city of Gwadar. 

However, a feasibility conducted in late 2019 suggested Pakistani authorities were looking for another location for the refinery project closer to the port city of Karachi rather than in the restive Balochistsn province, home to a long-running separatist insurgency. 

While no date has been confirmed for the Saudi crown prince’s visit, Pakistani officials are hopeful of a progress on the proposed oil refinery and other projects while he is in Pakistan. 

“The crown prince has assured of supporting various projects in Pakistan, including $9-$10 billion oil refinery that he brought to Pakistan in 2019,” Sharif said at a ceremony in Islamabad on Friday. 




Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif addresses a ceremony in Islamabad, Pakistan, on October 28, 2022. (Government of Pakistan)

The Pakistani premier visited the Kingdom earlier this week, where he also held a meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. He told the Saudi crown prince that the people in Pakistan were awaiting his visit. 

Speaking at the ceremony, Sharif said the Saudis had complained of a delay in the projects, including a hospital, and it was “very embarrassing” for him. 

“Recently, a team from the Saudi Development Fund visited Pakistan and they complained of the delays,” he said. 

“Believe me it was very embarrassing. I called a meeting and within 48 hours every procedure was completed.” 

The prime minister said he apologized for the delays during his recent meeting with the Saudi crown prince. 

“He (the crown prince) said ‘the people of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are closely tied in a brotherly relationship’,” Sharif told the attendees. 

“[He] has assured of supporting various projects in Pakistan, including the oil refinery.” 

Pakistan’s petroleum products imports have increased by 6 percent to $4.86 billion during the first quarter of the current fiscal year (July-September), when compared with the same period last year, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. 

The South Asian nation is already grappling with declining foreign exchange reserves and a widening current account deficit, besides higher inflation. 

Pakistani experts and individuals familiar with the developments have called for an independent company and board for the implementation of the refinery project. 

“Political volatility on our side, weak capacity at the ministry of petroleum and land issues in Balochistan stopped it,” Haroon Sharif, former chairman of Pakistan’s Board of Investment (BOI), told Arab News. 

“If PM wants to revive, he should form an independent company with world class CEO and board to restart feasibility and implementation. Otherwise, it will remain a pipe dream.” 

The project was imitated during Haroon’s tenure as the BOI chairman. 

On Thursday, Pakistan’s Finance Minister Ishaq Dar also held a virtual meeting of a joint committee of the Saudi–Pakistan Supreme Coordination Council with Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman. 

Both sides discussed and reviewed areas of mutual cooperation and collaboration, including energy, industry, mineral resources, commerce, finance, investment tourism, communication, information technology, agriculture, food security, transportation, logistics and maritime to increase trade exchanges and investment, according to the Pakistani finance ministry. 

Pakistan is also expected to devise a new petroleum policy ahead of the Saudi crown prince’s visit, according to people familiar with the plans. 


Pakistan’s Sindh orders inquiry after clashes at Imran Khan party rally in Karachi

Updated 2 min 47 sec ago
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Pakistan’s Sindh orders inquiry after clashes at Imran Khan party rally in Karachi

  • Khan’s PTI party accuses police of shelling to disperse its protesters, placing hurdles to hinder rally in Karachi 
  • Sindh Local Government Minister Nasir Hussain Shah vows all those found guilty in the inquiry will be punished

ISLAMABAD: The government in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province has ordered an inquiry into clashes that took place between police and supporters of former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party in Karachi on Sunday, as it held a rally to demand his release from prison. 

The provincial government had granted PTI permission to hold a public gathering at Karachi’s Bagh-i-Jinnah Park and had also welcomed Sohail Afridi, the chief minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where Khan’s party is in power, when he arrived in the city last week. However, the PTI cited a delay in receiving a permit and announced a last-minute change to a gate of Mazar-i-Quaid, the mausoleum of the nation’s founder. 

Despite the change, PTI supporters congregated at the originally advertised venue. PTI officials claimed the party faced obstacles in reaching the venue and that its supporters were met with police intervention. Footage of police officers arresting Khan supporters in Karachi were shared widely on social media platforms. 

“A complete inquiry is being held and whoever is found guilty in this, he will be punished,” Sindh Local Government Minister Nasir Hussain Shah said while speaking to a local news channel on Sunday. 

Shah said the PTI had sought permission to hold its rally at Bagh-i-Jinnah in Karachi from the Sindh government, even though the venue’s administration falls under the federal government’s jurisdiction. 

He said problems arose when the no objection certificate to hold the rally was delayed for a few hours and the party announced it would hold the rally “on the road.”

The rally took place amid rising tensions between the PTI and Pakistan’s military and government. Khan, who remains in jail on a slew of charges he says are politically motivated since August 2023, blames the military and the government for colluding to keep him away from power by rigging the 2024 general election and implicating him in false cases. Both deny his allegations. 

Since Khan was ousted in a parliamentary vote in April 2022, the PTI has complained of a widespread state crackdown, while Khan and his senior party colleagues have been embroiled in dozens of legal cases.