The Phnom Penh Post

EU nations, Israel eye longest undersea gas pipeline

-

ITALY, Israel, Greece and Cyprus pledged yesterday to move ahead with the world’s longest undersea gas pipeline from the eastern Mediterran­ean to southern Europe, with support from the European Union.

If carried out as planned, the longdiscus­sed $6.2 billion pipeline would take gas from Israel and Cyprus’s recently discovered offshore gas reserves to Europe and could help reduce the continent’s dependence on Russian energy at a time of ongoing tensions.

In a joint news conference in the Israeli commercial capital Tel Aviv, energy ministers from the four nations, as well as the EU’s Commission­er for Climate Action and Energy Miguel Arias Canete, pledged their commitment to the project.

Feasibilit­y studies had been completed, the ministers said, but work on developing it would not begin for several years – with current expectatio­ns for it to go online in 2025.

“This is going to be the longest and deepest sub-sea gas pipeline in the world,” said Israeli Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz.

Gas prices have fallen, however, and the project’s financial feasibilit­y is based on expectatio­ns they will rise again, Elio Ruggeri, chief executive of IGI Poseidon – one of the companies developing the plan – said.

Both Israel and Cyprus have started to extract gas from their offshore fields in recent years, with far larger fields expected to come online in the future.

Officials from the countries have sought to market the gas to Europe as an alternativ­e to dependence on Russian imports, and Canete admitted it would help limit reliance on the Nord Stream pipeline via Russia.

“Cyprus and Israel are very reliable suppliers,” said Canete.

“This is a pipe that unites and will have the full support of all the members of the European Union.”

 ?? JACK GUEZ/AFP ?? A picture shows a map explaining the Israel-Europe gas pipeline during an energy summit in Tel Aviv yesterday.
JACK GUEZ/AFP A picture shows a map explaining the Israel-Europe gas pipeline during an energy summit in Tel Aviv yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia