Home Other India to transfer Chabahar port back to Iran, reports

India to transfer Chabahar port back to Iran, reports

0
India to transfer Chabahar port back to Iran, reports

Reports from April 23–24, 2026, indicate that India is indeed considering a strategic shift regarding the Chabahar Port in Iran. While not a permanent “transfer back” in the sense of a total exit, New Delhi is reportedly exploring a temporary operational transfer to an Iranian entity to shield Indian companies from imminent U.S. sanctions.


1. The Looming Deadline

The urgency is driven by the expiration of a critical U.S. sanctions waiver.

  • Expiration Date: The current six-month waiver is set to expire this Sunday, April 26, 2026.
  • U.S. Pressure: The Trump administration has threatened a 25% additional tariff on any country doing business with Iran. For India, this could effectively raise total duties on exports to the U.S. to as high as 75%.

2. The Proposed “Pause” Strategy

To preserve its 10-year operational agreement signed in 2024, India is weighing a “contingency arrangement”:

  • Stake Transfer: India Ports Global Ltd (IPGL) may transfer its holding in the Chabahar Free Zone to a local Iranian partner.
  • Operational Handover: An Iranian operator would manage the Shahid Beheshti terminal during the sanctions period.
  • Reversion Clause: The arrangement reportedly includes a legal guarantee that operational control would revert to India once sanctions are eased or a new waiver is secured.
  • Financial Liquidation: India has reportedly transferred approximately $120 million to Iran to fulfill its existing financial commitments and “de-risk” its sovereign exposure.

3. Strategic Impact

Chabahar is India’s primary gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia, allowing it to bypass Pakistan.

  • The “China” Risk: Analysts warn that a complete withdrawal would create a vacuum likely to be filled by China, which has deeper pockets and a higher tolerance for U.S. sanctions.
  • Economic Reality: Despite the port’s strategic value, trade with Iran accounts for only 0.15% of India’s overall trade. Given the risk to vital economic ties with the U.S., New Delhi appears to be prioritizing its broader trade stability.

4. Current Status (April 24, 2026)

  • Negotiations: The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) confirmed today that it remains in parallel discussions with Washington for a waiver extension and with Tehran for the contingency plan.
  • Advisory: India has already advised its citizens to avoid traveling to Iran and urged those currently there to leave as the security situation in West Asia deteriorates.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here