Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cyprus, Israel work on natural gas deal

- MENELAOS HADJICOSTI­S

NICOSIA, Cyprus — Cyprus and Israel are working on a deal to build a pipeline that will convey natural gas from both countries to the east Mediterran­ean island nation, where it will be liquefied for export by ship to Europe and potentiall­y elsewhere, the Cypriot energy minister said Monday.

Minister Giorgos Papanastas­iou said Monday he would soon visit Israel to hammer out a formal agreement. Once the deal is signed, the pipeline could be completed in 18 months.

It will take 2½ years to build a liquefacti­on plant on Cyprus once investors are secured.

So far, five sizable gas deposits have been discovered off Cyprus’ southern coastline. Israel has 11 such fields: the biggest, named Leviathan, contains an estimated 22 trillion cubic feet of gas.

Papanastas­iou said he would meet later this month with energy companies licensed to explore for oil and gas inside Cyprus’ exclusive economic zone — include French Total, Italy’s Eni, ExxonMobil and Chevron — to scope out ways of collaborat­ing on projects that would expedite getting their gas discoverie­s to market.

The minister said Israel agreed to the proposal pitched by the Cypriot government for the pipeline and liquefacti­on plant, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu disclosed on Sunday.

“The eastern Mediterran­ean has enough [gas] deposits. Most are inside Israel’s exclusive economic zone, but Cyprus has sufficient quantities as well for this project to materializ­e,” Papanastas­iou told reporters.

The minister explained that this project was a truncated version of the EastMed pipeline idea. That proposal — for a 1,300-mile, $6 billion pipeline designed to convey regional gas directly to Europe — has in recent years fallen out of favor.

Instead of a direct pipeline connection to Europe, processed gas from Cyprus could reach internatio­nal markets by ship.

“When you have liquefied natural gas, it can go in any direction. … Europe now needs it more, but markets can also be found in Asia,” said Papanastas­iou.

In December, the previous Cypriot government said it was weighing a proposal for a similar plan as Russia’s war in Ukraine compounded an energy crisis, the AP reported.

Papanastas­iou said Cypriot and Israeli authoritie­s would need a few more months to negotiate a separate agreement on how much gas from the Cypriot Aphrodite gas field fell within neighborin­g Israeli waters.

A proposal for a pipeline to convey Cypriot and Egyptian gas to liquefacti­on plants in Egypt for export remains separate from the Israeli-Cypriot plan, the minister said.

 ?? (AP/Petros Karadjias) ?? People on the beach take photos of the “Tungsten Explorer” drilling ship, in the southern coastal city of Larnaca, Cyprus, in late 2021.
(AP/Petros Karadjias) People on the beach take photos of the “Tungsten Explorer” drilling ship, in the southern coastal city of Larnaca, Cyprus, in late 2021.

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