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News > World

Pakistan and Iran Aim to Boost Trade to $5 Billion

  • Iranian President Hassan Rouhani reviews the guard of honor at the Prime Minister's house in Islamabad, Pakistan, in this March 25, 2016 handout photo.

    Iranian President Hassan Rouhani reviews the guard of honor at the Prime Minister's house in Islamabad, Pakistan, in this March 25, 2016 handout photo. | Photo: Reuters

Published 26 March 2016
Opinion

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has arrived in Pakistan on his first landmark visit since the lifting of nuclear-related sanctions.  

Pakistan and Iran aim to increase annual trade volumes between the two countries to $5 billion by 2021, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said on Saturday.

Sharif spoke at a business conference with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, who arrived in Islamabad on Friday for two-day talks focused on increasing Pakistan's electricity imports from Iran, boosting trade relations and reviving plans for a gas pipeline between the two countries.

"In the five years strategic action plan signed yesterday we have aimed at boosting our bilateral trade to the level of 5 billion U.S. dollars by 2021," Sharif said.

"More land routes for trade on our border, trade exhibitions, industrial and agricultural cooperation and mutual recognition of standards will boost trade."

Trade between Pakistan and Iran fell to US$432 million in 2010-11 from US$1.32 billion in 2008-09, according to the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan, after western powers imposed sanctions on Tehran aimed at halting a nuclear program they suspected was aimed at developing a nuclear bomb. 

Most of the sanctions were lifted in January in return for Iran complying with a deal to curb its nuclear ambitions.

"Iran has the capability to help the development of the economic infrastructure of Pakistan including roads, railways dams and others area," Rouhani said in his speech at the Pakistan-Iran Business Forum.

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