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Natural Gas January 16, 2019 01:00:13 AM

Israel, Egypt and Others Form New Natural Gas Group

Anil
Mathews
OilMonster Author
The creation of the new grouping comes just as energy development in the Eastern Mediterranean is picking up pace after years of unfulfilled promise.
Israel, Egypt and Others Form New Natural Gas Group

SEATTLE (Oil Monster): Countries around the Eastern Mediterranean took a potentially important step toward realizing their dreams of boosting energy production with the creation Monday of a forum joining Israel, Egypt, Cyprus, and other neighbors to develop their new natural gas discoveries.

The Eastern Mediterranean Gas Forum, announced Monday in Cairo, formalizes growing energy ties among recent rivals and could spur much-needed development of energy infrastructure required to tap the region’s potential as a source of energy for Europe and beyond. The forum in particular cements the growing commercial links between Israel and Egypt; Israel expects to start shipping natural gas to Egypt in the next few months as part of a landmark, $15 billion deal between the two countries.

But the new organization has a few notable absences, including Syria and Lebanon—both of which are trying to develop potential offshore gas fields—and especially Turkey. Ankara’s repeated opposition to energy exploration off the coast of Cyprus, which Turkey views as disputed waters, has cast a cloud over the development of natural gas discoveries in the region. Turkish warships chased away an Italian drillship operating off Cyprus last year, and Ankara tried to warn off ExxonMobil from drilling in its own block off the Cypriot coast late last year.

The new body will promote “discussions among countries that already have cooperation with each other,” said Brenda Shaffer, an energy expert at Georgetown University. “Hopefully, in the next round of the forum, Turkey will be involved, and that would make it much more significant and not just include the happy campers.”

The creation of the new grouping comes just as energy development in the Eastern Mediterranean is picking up pace after years of unfulfilled promise. Israeli gas exports to Egypt will start in the first half of this year, Israel’s energy minister said Monday, and it will start development of additional offshore gas fields this year. Egypt, meanwhile, is now producing enough gas from its own giant offshore find that it has stopped importing pricey liquefied gas to power its economy. Lebanon, for its part, hopes to start drilling a pair of offshore areas this year.

Cyprus, meanwhile, is trying to develop its own gas resources and is plowing ahead with tenders for additional offshore exploration. ExxonMobil is carrying out exploratory drilling in a promising area just north of where Egypt found a massive gas field, raising expectations of a big discovery. A significant find there would be huge for Cyprus because the relatively small size of its earlier offshore discoveries made it tough to economically get the gas to market; a big new field could pave the way for either a pipeline to Egypt or a gas-liquefying facility in Cyprus.

The first challenge is getting the gas out of the ground and to the market. While Israel and Egypt solved that problem for a major Israeli offshore field, enabling exports to begin this year, Cyprus is still weighing whether to build a pipeline from its offshore fields to Egypt.

More grandiose plans, such as a pipeline snaking across to southern Europe via Crete, keep colliding with political and economic realities. Deep waters and high costs make building a pipeline to Europe an expensive proposition.

Courtesy: www.foreignpolicy.com


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