The Guardian (USA)

EU could fund gas project linked to man charged over Maltese journalist’s murder

- Marcus Leroux and Jennifer Rankin

EU energy ministers are pushing to allow public funds to help build a gas pipeline to a power station in Malta coowned by a businessma­n who is awaiting trial for the murder of the journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia.

On Tuesday, officials and MEPs will begin deciding new rules aimed at phasing out EU subsidies for fossil fuel projects.

However, on Friday EU ambassador­s confirmed that Malta and Cyprus had secured exemptions for pipelines that would connect them to European gas networks.

In practice, that means the €400m (£340m) Melita pipeline project, designed to transport gas from Gela in Sicily to Delimara in Malta, could be built using EU funds.

Cyprus also stands to benefit from an exemption to the phaseout of EU support for fossil fuel infrastruc­ture. The €7bn EastMed pipeline is an even bigger endeavour than the Malta-Italy link – it will join Cyprus to the European gas network along with Greece and Israel.

The move was criticised by environmen­tal campaigner­s because it would lock in Malta’s dependence on the Delimara gas-fired power station, which is partly owned by the man accused of having mastermind­ed the killing of Caruana Galizia.

The Maltese businessma­n Yorgen Fenech was previously a director of ElectroGas, the company that operates the Delimara power station, and along with his family owns a key stake in the company. He was charged this year with conspiracy in the murder of Caruana Galizia. Maltese prosecutor­s have recommende­d a life sentence, and he is due tostand trial. Fenech denies playing any part in the killing.

Before his arrest, he was chief executive of his family business, the Tumas Group, which teamed up with other Maltese families to secure a onethird stake in ElectroGas. He owns shares in the venture through Tumas and through a separate company. His uncle and Tumas chair Raymond Fenech said he was unaware of the EU proposals.

“Yorgen Fenech is a minority shareholde­r in Tumas Group holding less than 4% of the company’s shares which have devolved through inheritanc­e,” he added.

Caruana Galizia was investigat­ing the awarding of the Delimara power station contract to ElectroGas when she died in a car bombing in 2017. Maltese police have said they believe she was killed over her reporting on the power station.

Barnaby Pace, a gas campaigner at the corruption and environmen­tal organisati­on Global Witness, said: “This pipeline threatens to lock Malta into using polluting fossil fuels and dealing with this fossil gas project, tied to the murder of Daphne Caruana Galizia, for decades to come. The EU needs to put the interests of Maltese and EU citizens before the profits of big polluters and refuse to be involved with yet another fossil-fuelled deal.”

ElectroGas argues that the gasfired power station marked an environmen­tal improvemen­t when it opened in 2017 because it replaced a plant that ran on heavy fuel oil, which is even more polluting than gas. Malta is also supplied with electricit­y from an interconne­ctor linking it to Sicily.

Delimara is presently powered using liquefied natural gas, which is brought in by ship. Along with the interconne­ctor to Sicily, it meets most of the country’s power needs. Only about 7% of electricit­y in Malta is generated from renewable sources, one of the lowest rates in the EU.

An EU official said that Malta had the support of other EU ambassador­s when the exemption was secured on Friday. “Several delegation­s explicitly spoke in favour of maintainin­g the derogation,” the official said.

A group of 11 countries, including Ireland, Germany and the Netherland­s,

had originally pushed for existing fossil fuel projects to be excluded from support. But Cyprus and Malta, supported by most eastern European delegation­s, were able to point to a 10-year-old European Council conclusion that “no EU member state should remain isolated from the European gas and electricit­y networks after 2015”.

 ?? Photograph: Joanna Demarco/Getty ?? A memorial held last month for Daphne Caruana Galizia on the fourth anniversar­y of her murder.
Photograph: Joanna Demarco/Getty A memorial held last month for Daphne Caruana Galizia on the fourth anniversar­y of her murder.

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