India has agreed to increase its freight transit through Iran to help more traffic pass through the strategic port of Chabahar, according to the Iranian transportation minister Rostam Qassemi.
“We have had some good discussions on the issue and we agreed that freight transit through this path should increase,” Qassemi said in a briefing with reporters on Tuesday.
The comments come more than a week after Iran, India and Uzbekistan held a virtual meeting to discuss the situation on the Chabahar, Iran’s only Ocean port located on the Sea of Oman where trade has plummeted after the takeover of the Taliban in Afghanistan.
Chabahar had been viewed as a major trade gateway between the Indian Ocean and Afghanistan and other landlocked countries in the Central Asia region.
Iran has invested heavily on construction of a railroad connecting Chabahar to the Afghan border while India has contributed financially to provision of port operation equipment in one of the terminals in Chabahar.
The map shows how Chabahar Port in Iran can link India with Afghanistan.
Qassemi said that Chabahar has a capacity for processing 30 million tons of cargo per year, adding that Iran expects other parties involved in the project to increase their financial contribution to development work.
He said Iran will need to invest more on the transportation network supporting Chabahar, adding that railway connected to the port should reach northern Iranian areas bordering Central Asian countries.
The minister said that size of investment requires assurances from countries like India that freight traffic through Chabahar will increase.
He described previous agreements with India on Chabahar as imperfect, adding that Tehran and New Delhi should work to improve the deal.