The National - News

Egypt to begin supplying gas to Lebanon early next year to ease power crisis

- FAREED RAHMAN and JENNIFER GNANA

Egypt is planning to supply gas to Lebanon by early next year in an effort to help ease the power crisis in the country, according to its petroleum minister.

The North African country will export 60 to 65 million cubic feet of gas per day to Lebanon, Tarek El Molla told reporters on the sidelines of the Abu Dhabi Internatio­nal Petroleum and Exhibition Conference yesterday.

“We are going to supply them with what they are requesting. We are just [doing] due diligence and checking the pipelines through Jordan and Syria,” he said.

“The supply is expected at the end of the year and early next year,” Mr El Molla said.

Lebanon has been dealing with a severe power crisis that has nearly crippled its economy. It faced a complete power cut in October as the two power stations supplying the national grid ran out of fuel.

State-run Electricit­e du Liban recently said it was producing only minimal amounts of power as it was unable to import fuel, leaving businesses and households almost entirely dependent on small, privately-owned generators.

Egypt is providing gas to Lebanon under a US-backed deal that seeks to ease power shortages in the country.

Under the agreement, Egypt would supply gas to Lebanon that could provide it with six hours of power per day. Gas will eventually be brought to Lebanon via Syria and the Arab Gas pipeline.

Lebanon will pay Egypt for a yet-to-be-decided amount of gas via a World Bank loan.

Lebanon, which relies primarily on fuel oil and gasoil to power its electricit­y grid, is increasing­ly looking to gas as an alternativ­e. It also straddles a gas rich region.

Egypt is the second-biggest producer of gas in North Africa after Algeria and accounts for around 1.1 per cent of the world’s proven reserves, according to the BP Statistica­l Review of Energy 2021.

Last year, Eni also announced the discovery of a gasfield, which is estimated to hold up to 4 trillion cubic feet of gas, in the waters of the Nile Delta, offshore Egypt.

Lebanon’s power woes are compounded by an ongoing economic crisis, which ranks among the world’s top 10 crises – possibly even the top three – since the mid-19th century, the World Bank said in June.

The country is suffering from one of the world’s deepest economic depression­s on record.

It defaulted on about $31 billion of Eurobonds in 2020 and its currency has lost more than 90 per cent of its value against the US dollar, leading to surging inflation, increased unemployme­nt and widespread poverty.

Lebanon’s economy shrank by 20.3 per cent last year, after a 6.7 per cent contractio­n the previous year, according to the World Bank.

It has restarted talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to secure a bailout package worth $10bn but the government will have to execute major reforms to seal the deal, experts say.

The IMF package is significan­t as it could unlock aid worth billions of dollars from other donors.

Lebanon’s economy shrank by 20.3% last year, after contractin­g 6.7% the previous year

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