Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari will leave on a day-long visit to Iran today to formally inaugurate work on the Pakistan-Iran gas pipeline despite the US threat of possible sanctions over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Zardari and his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are set to participate in the groundbreaking ceremony for the Pakistani section of the pipeline at Gabd in Iran.

Media reports said Zardari would be accompanied by a 300-member delegation, including the Foreign Minister, Petroleum Minister and National Assembly Speaker.

Several heads of state and government have been invited to the ceremony but it was not clear whether they would attend in the face of US opposition to the much-delayed $7.5 billion project.

The groundbreaking ceremony will mark the start of work on the 781-km Pakistani section of the pipeline to be built at a cost of $1.5 billion.

Iran will provide a $500 million loan for the project.

The pipeline on the Iranian side is almost complete.

The US has called on Pakistan to abandon the pipeline project, saying it has offered alternative solutions to the country’s energy requirements.

US Ambassador Richard Olson has said Pakistan should focus on the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India gas pipeline project.

An Iranian-Pakistani consortium will complete the project and Pakistan is expected to start receiving gas after the pipeline is completed in December 2014. Iran will supply 750 million cubic feet of gas a day to Pakistan.

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