The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Qatar joins Lebanon gas exploratio­n consortium

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BEIRUT: Lebanon announced that Qatar had entered a consortium to explore for offshore gas in waters near Israel, following a historic border deal last year.

The agreement green-lights Lebanon’s exploratio­n of its southern Qana, or Sidon, reservoir following the signing of the landmark accord last October demarcatin­g its maritime borders with Israel. Sunday’s deal will see the gas-rich Gulf country’s state-run QatarEnerg­y receive a minority 30 per cent stake in two blocks of Lebanon’s exclusive economic zone, according to Lebanese caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati.

French company TotalEnerg­ies and Italy’s Eni will both retain 35 per cent shares in the blocks after Russia’s Novatek relinquish­ed its minority stake in 2022.

Lebanese Energy Minister Walid Fayad and his Qatari counterpar­t Saad al-Kaabi, who is also QatarEnerg­y’s chief executive, signed the deal on Sunday, along with the heads of Eni and TotalEnerg­ies.

Kaabi told a press conference following the signing ceremony that Qatar’s involvemen­t was an “opportunit­y to support Lebanon’s economic developmen­t”.

Lebanon has been caught in an economic quagmire that has plunged much of its population into poverty and been described by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern history.

TotalEnerg­ies’ Patrick Pouyanne said he expected the exploratio­n phase of the Qana project to be completed “within the next 12 months”, expressing hope that the work would result in discoverie­s of hydrocarbo­ns.

Under a United States (US)brokered accord, Lebanon and Israel, which are officially still at war, delimited their maritime borders in October last year. The agreement paved the way for Lebanon to begin exploratio­n in the Qana reservoir – which is partly located inside Israel’s territoria­l waters – in return for compensati­on payments.

Speaking in October after finalising the demarcatio­n accord, then-Israeli prime minister Yair Lapid said Israel would be entitled to 17 per cent of the proceeds from Qana.

“Qatar’s entry into the consortium is above all politicall­y significan­t,” according to energy consultant Naji Abi Aad.

He told AFP that Doha’s involvemen­t “brings a political guarantee” as Lebanon grapples with its multiple crises.

But analysts agree it will take several years for Beirut to begin exploiting the Qana field, should a commercial­ly viable discovery be made.

“You need an infrastruc­ture to export the gas, which currently does not exist,” explained Abi Aad, adding that constructi­on of a coastal pipeline would be required for any domestic use of the energy reserves.

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