Pakistan’s PPL says Türkiye partnership opens ‘new chapter’ in offshore oil and gas exploration

The picture shared on December 4, 2025, shows Pakistan Petroleum Limited Managing Director Sikandar Ali Memon. (AN photo)
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Updated 05 December 2025
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Pakistan’s PPL says Türkiye partnership opens ‘new chapter’ in offshore oil and gas exploration

  • Indus Block C work program valued at $3.45 million, seen as Pakistan’s most ambitious offshore drilling test in collaboration with Türkish state company
  • Pakistan has drilled offshore since the 1960s, including wells like Pak Can-1, Pasni-X2, Kekra-1 but none produced commercially viable volumes 

ISLAMABAD: The chief executive of Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL) said on Thursday a new exploration partnership with Turkish Petroleum Overseas Company (TPOC) could accelerate Pakistan’s search for offshore oil and gas, describing the venture as a potential turning point for long-stalled development of the sector.

The agreement, signed in Islamabad this week, includes three offshore and two onshore concessions, the most prominent being Eastern Offshore Indus Block C, where TPOC, the overseas arm of Türkiye’s state-owned Turkish Petroleum Corporation (TPAO), will operate with a 25 percent stake. PPL holds 35 percent, while state-owned Oil & Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) and Mari Energies each retain 20 percent.

The block carries a minimum work commitment of $3.45 million, and is being positioned as Pakistan’s first serious offshore drilling attempt under the Pakistan–Türkiye energy collaboration.

Speaking to Arab News, PPL Managing Director Sikandar Ali Memon said TPAO brings scale, deep-sea rigs and technical capacity that local firms lack.

“Their coming down here, working with us, will not only develop the offshore prospects, but also the service industry and other related businesses,” Memon said. “I would say this is the beginning of a wonderful chapter that we are looking forward to.”

TPOC will also join Pakistan’s offshore Deep F block as a non-operating partner, where Mari Energies leads the venture with Fatima Petroleum as co-partner.

Pakistan has drilled offshore intermittently since the 1960s, including high-profile wells such as Pak Can-1 (1985), Pasni-X2 (2005), and Kekra-1 in 2019, once touted as the country’s deepest attempt, but none yielded commercial-scale results. Discoveries that did materialize produced volumes too small to economically develop.

Officials say failures were driven by cost, limited technology and uncertain policy environments, though each attempt improved basin modelling and seismic understanding.

Memon said the new Indus Block C prospect benefits from advanced 3D seismic mapping, independent technical validation and an upgraded global technology landscape.

Drilling of the first well is unlikely before early 2027, he added, though the joint venture hopes to accelerate timelines.

Pakistan is seeking foreign capital to reduce reliance on imported fuels, expand domestic reserves and support a strained energy system facing rising demand and falling onshore outputs. Offshore blocks are being offered through new bidding rounds in a push to attract experienced operators.

“This is one of the best prospects,” Memon said, adding that previous technology limitations had held back Pakistan’s offshore potential. “They [TPAO] found that this is the prospect they want to come and join in.”

The officer said PPL intends to pursue further deepwater exploration while improving production from existing onshore fields.

“In the last one-and-a-half years, we have added about 40-plus million units of hydrocarbons to the economy,” Memon said. “We’ll continue optimizing today’s wells while exploring tomorrow’s reserves.”


Tolerance for ‘cross-border terrorism’ has reached its limit, Pakistan warns Afghanistan after airstrikes

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Tolerance for ‘cross-border terrorism’ has reached its limit, Pakistan warns Afghanistan after airstrikes

  • Pakistan says carried out intelligence-based airstrikes in border regions with Afghanistan on Saturday, killing 80 militants
  • Afghan authorities dismiss allegations, saying Pakistan killed and injured dozens of civilians, vowing an “appropriate” response 

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari has warned Kabul in a recent statement that Islamabad’s tolerance for “cross-border terrorism” has reached its limit after Pakistan carried out airstrikes in Afghanistan to target alleged militant camps. 

A Pakistani security official said Islamabad carried out intelligence-based airstrikes on Saturday and destroyed seven centers of the Pakistani Taliban or the TTP militant group in the three Afghan provinces of Nangarhar, Paktika and Khost. The official said more than 80 militants were killed in the attacks. An earlier statement from Pakistan’s information ministry said the targets included a camp of a Daesh regional affiliate, the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), which claimed a suicide bombing at an Islamabad Shia mosque that killed 32 people this month.

Saturday’s airstrikes followed a series of attacks inside Pakistan amid a surge in militancy. Authorities say the attacks, particularly in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province bordering Afghanistan and the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, were carried out by the TTP and allied groups that Islamabad alleges are operating from sanctuaries in Afghanistan. Kabul denies this and urges Pakistan to concentrate on its security issues without blaming Afghanistan.

In a post on X on Sunday, Afghan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said Pakistani forces had violated Afghanistan’s territory and killed and wounded dozens of civilians in Nangarhar and Paktika. The Afghan Taliban’s claims of civilian casualties could not be independently verified. Pakistan did not immediately comment on the allegation. 
In a statement issued by his office on Sunday night, Zardari said Pakistan’s recent actions in Afghanistan are rooted in its “inherent right” to defend its people against “terrorism” from across the border. 

 “Tolerance for cross-border terrorism has reached its limit,” Zardari said. 

The Pakistani president reiterated Islamabad’s stance that it is concerning that de facto authorities in Kabul continue to allow “terrorist elements” to operate from Afghan soil in violation of their commitments under the Doha Accord, an agreement signed between both sides in October after fierce border clashes last year, Kabul pledged that Afghanistan’s soil would not be used against any country for militant activities.

The president said it was regrettable that despite warnings and repeated engagement from Islamabad, Afghan authorities failed to take action against militants. 

“He said Pakistan exercised restraint for a considerable period and confined its response to terrorist hideouts located near the border areas,” the president’s office said.

“However, he warned that Pakistan is fully aware of where the planners, facilitators and patrons of violence are based. If bloodshed continues inside Pakistan, those responsible will not remain beyond reach.”

Zardari reaffirmed Pakistan seeks peace, stability and cooperative relations with its neighbors. However, the Pakistani president said peace “cannot rest on denial, duplicity or inaction against terrorism.”

“The protection of Pakistani lives remains paramount and non-negotiable,” he added. 

Afghanistan’s Ministry of National Defense said on Sunday that Pakistan’s airstrikes were in breach of international law and Islamic principles.

It warned that an “appropriate and measured response” will be given in a “suitable time.”

Saturday’s airstrikes and subsequent allegations marks one of the most direct confrontations between Islamabad and Kabul in recent months. It risks further straining already fragile ties along the volatile border between the two neighbors.