The Jerusalem Post

Lebanon to begin offshore energy search in block disputed by Israel

- • By LISA BARRINGTON (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanon said on Friday it has signed its first offshore oil and gas exploratio­n and production agreements for two energy blocks, including one disputed by Israel.

Lebanon’s energy minister said the dispute with Israel would not stop Lebanon benefiting from undersea reserves in the contentiou­s Block 9, while consortium operator Total said it would not drill the block’s first well near the disputed zone.

A consortium of France’s Total, Italy’s Eni and Russia’s Novatek signed the agreements for the two blocks, which are among five that Lebanon put up for tender in the country’s much-delayed first licensing round.

Israel and Lebanon, enemy states, have exchanged threats and condemnati­on over the tender, amid rising tensions over territoria­l and marine boundaries between them.

“Today, we announce that we have started our petroleum path... after signing the agreements and launching the exploratio­n activities,” Lebanese Energy Minister Cesar Abi Khalil said at a ceremony in Beirut.

The contracts were signed on January 29.

Data suggest there are reserves in Lebanon’s waters, but no explorator­y drilling has taken place to estimate their size.

Abi Khalil has said a second offshore licensing round would be held once the first commercial­ly viable discovery was made.

Tensions

The first explorator­y well will be drilled in Block 4 in 2019, said Stephane Michel, Total’s head of exploratio­n and production in the Middle East and North Africa.

The second well will be drilled in Block 9, more than 25 km. from the maritime border claimed by Israel, he said at the ceremony. “There is no reason not to proceed in this way,” Michel added.

Lebanon has an unresolved maritime border dispute with Israel over a triangular area of sea of around 860 sq. km. that extends along the edge of three of its total 10 blocks.

Total said in a statement the disputed waters comprise 8% of Block 9 and that its exploratio­n well “will have no interferen­ce at all with any fields or prospects” in the disputed sliver of water.

Lebanese and Israeli officials said David Satterfiel­d, acting assistant US secretary of state, was in Lebanon last week and in Israel the previous week on a mediation mission. US officials confirmed his travels without detailing his agenda.

National Infrastruc­ture, Water and Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz said on Friday a diplomatic resolution to the dispute “is preferable to threats.”

But, speaking to Tel Aviv radio station 102 FM, Steinitz added: “We made two things clear, in a very forthright manner, over the last year. One, don’t provoke us, and don’t explore in or even get close to the disputed line-ofcontact.”

Abi Khalil told Reuters the heightened tension between the two countries in recent weeks has “not had an effect” on the consortium’s plans to explore.

East Med

Lebanon is on the Levant Basin in the eastern Mediterran­ean where a number of big sub-sea gas fields have been discovered since 2009.

Eni reported the Mediterran­ean’s largest discovery in 2015: the Zohr field off Egypt which holds an estimated 30 trillion cubic feet of gas.

And on Thursday, Eni said it and Total had discovered a promising natural gas field off Cyprus.

Fuad Krekshi, Eni’s executive vice president of the Middle East, said Eni’s entry into Lebanon’s market is a “natural consequenc­e” of its existing role in the Mediterran­ean region.

Total, with 40%, heads the consortium drilling Lebanon’s first offshore well. Eni also holds 40% and Novatek 20%.

Vyacheslav Mishin, head of Novatek’s new Lebanon office, said the projected global growth in natural gas and LNG consumptio­n was key to his company’s future growth.

“The Middle East market for LNG consumptio­n is forecast to grow by more than 100% by 2030,” he said.

Managing expectatio­ns

Reserves could be used domestical­ly or exported.

Both are attractive for Lebanon, which has been short of electricit­y since its 1975-90 civil war and has an anemic economy battered by war in neighborin­g Syria and political tensions.

It is also hoped the developing oil and gas industry will create jobs and economic growth. To this end, the EPA contracts say 80% of people employed by the consortium should be Lebanese, with priority given to local suppliers and contractor­s.

But the commercial viability of reserves depends on energy market prices, the ability to secure customers and the cost and politics of building export infrastruc­ture.

“For all the fields in the region, there are commercial, political, and technical challenges that hinder exploitati­on for the purposes of export,” Tareq Baconi, a European Council on Foreign Relations visiting fellow on MENA energy, told Reuters.

“Many of the challenges for export will be faced by Lebanon as well when, and if, it discovers offshore reserves,” he said.

 ??  ?? ENERGY MINISTER Cesar Abi Khalil hands a document to Stephane Michel, Total’s head of exploratio­n and production in the Middle East and North Africa, during Lebanon’s first offshore oil and gas contract ceremony, in Beirut on Friday.
ENERGY MINISTER Cesar Abi Khalil hands a document to Stephane Michel, Total’s head of exploratio­n and production in the Middle East and North Africa, during Lebanon’s first offshore oil and gas contract ceremony, in Beirut on Friday.

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