Tue, 16 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 16, 2026 · 13:06
India News Updated Jun 16, 2026

Centre Denies Reports of India-Gulf Deep-Sea Energy Pipeline Plan

The Indian government has clarified that no deep-sea energy pipeline project connecting Gujarat to Oman and other Gulf countries is under consideration. The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas issued a statement refuting media reports about the Middle East-India Deepwater Pipeline (MEIDP). Meanwhile, the LNG carrier DISHA safely transited the Strait of Hormuz with a cargo of 62,370 tonnes of LNG bound for Dahej. The Directorate General of Shipping has also restricted deployment of Indian seafarers in Middle East conflict areas following recent casualties.

Centre refutes reports on deep-sea energy pipeline between India and the Gulf

New Delhi, June 16

The government on Tuesday refuted media reports that it is pursuing a deep-sea energy pipeline, connecting Gujarat to Oman and other Gulf countries.

In a clarification, the Petroleum Ministry said it has noticed a series of media reports suggesting that the Government of India is actively pursuing a deep-sea energy pipeline, sometimes referred to as the Middle East-India Deepwater Pipeline (MEIDP), connecting Gujarat to Oman and other Gulf countries.

"The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas wishes to categorically clarify that no such proposal is currently under consideration by this Ministry. There are no active discussions or negotiations with Oman or any other Gulf countries on this project at any level in this Ministry," it said in a statement.

"This clarification is issued to put all speculation in this regard to rest," added the ministry.

Meanwhile, the Malta-flagged LNG carrier DISHA, managed by a Shipping Corporation of India-led consortium, safely transited the Strait of Hormuz on Monday with a cargo of 62,370 metric tonnes of LNG bound for Dahej in Gujarat, and is likely to reach India on June 18.

The government said it remains in continuous coordination with the Ministry of External Affairs, Indian missions abroad, shipping companies, and other relevant stakeholders to ensure the safety and welfare of Indian seafarers and provide all assistance. Port operations across India remain normal, with no congestion reported.

The Directorate General of Shipping (DGS) has also advised shipping companies as well as maritime recruitment and placement agencies to restrict deployment of Indian seafarers to in the Middle East conflict areas until further orders, days after three Indian seafarers onboard MT Settebello were killed after the US military strike on the commercial vessel off the Oman coast.

DG Shipping, in a circular, said masters of vessels operating in or transiting through the Gulf region, including the Strait of Hormuz and adjoining waters, are advised to maintain heightened security awareness, closely monitor navigational warnings received and advisories issued from security agencies, and implement all applicable ship security measures and company security procedures.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Finally some sense! These big-ticket projects often get hyped up unnecessarily. But we should also think about why such rumours start – maybe India needs to reduce reliance on volatile regions for energy. Diversification is the need of the hour, not just clarification.

Vikram M

Sad to hear about the Indian seafarers killed on the MT Settebello. 😢 The government restricting deployment in conflict areas is a good step, but what about the families? They need proper compensation. Also, why wasn't the ship better protected? Just asking.

James A

From a logistical perspective, a deep-sea pipeline from the Gulf to India would be a massive engineering challenge, not to mention geopolitical risks. The Strait of Hormuz is a chokepoint. I think the Ministry is right to deny it and focus on safer alternatives like LNG carriers, which are flexible.

Rohit P

Yaar, let's stop depending on the Gulf for everything! India has so many renewable sources – solar, wind, even nuclear. The government should invest more in domestic energy. This pipeline would have been just another crutch. Good that it's not happening. #AtmanirbharBharat 💪

Kavya N

The government's clarification is welcomed, but why does the news media keep floating such stories? It creates unnecessary confusion. On the positive side, the safe transit of DISHA is reassuring. The authorities should ensure all Indian ships in the Gulf have extra security. Safety first.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked