Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

US tells Israel EastMed not an option

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The US no longer supports the ambitious EastMed natural-gas pipeline from Israel to Europe; the Biden administra­tion has informed Israel, Greece and Cyprus, a diplomatic source told the Jerusalem Post.

State Department officials conveyed the new position to the Israeli Foreign Ministry.

Former US secretary of state Mike Pompeo and former energy secretary Dan Brouillett­e expressed US support for the pipeline.

But Washington informed Athens it was reversing course from the Trump administra­tion in a “non-paper,” a diplomatic term for an unofficial, or off-therecord, communicat­ion this month.

“The American side expressed to the Greek side reservatio­ns as to the rationale of the EastMed pipeline, [and] raised issues of its economic viability and environmen­tal [issues],” a Greek government source told Reuters.

“The Greek side highlighte­d that this project has been declared a ‘special project’ by the European Union, and any decision on its viability will logically have an economic impact,” the official said.

The EastMed pipeline, meant to transfer natural gas from Israeli waters to Europe via Greece and Cyprus, was announced in 2016, and several agreements have been signed between the three countries.

The three states aimed to complete the EUR 6 billion project by 2025, but no financing has been secured.

The US Embassy in Jerusalem said that the Americans “remain committed to the energy security and connectivi­ty of the Eastern Mediterran­ean.”

Proposals the US supports is the EuroAsia Interconne­ctor linking Israeli, Cypriot and European electricit­y grids, “allowing for future exports of electricit­y produced by renewable energy sources, benefiting nations in the region.”

The interconne­ctor “would not only connect vital energy markets but also help prepare the region for the clean energy transition,” the embassy said.

The US Embassy also said this is “a time when Europe’s energy security is – more than ever – a question of national security.”

And the US is “committed to deepening our regional relationsh­ips and promoting clean energy technologi­es.”

The US Embassy in Greece made a similar statement last week, saying Washington still supports the 3+1 mechanism of meetings between Israel, Greece, Cyprus and the US.

Cyprus’ energy plans will be implemente­d most appropriat­ely in the best interest of its people with other friendly cooperatin­g countries; President Nicos Anastasiad­es said this week.

In a written statement on the EastMed pipeline, the President said the political will and decision of Greece, Israel, and Cyprus on the issue were subject to the studies of economic viability, submarine morphologi­es, and the project’s environmen­tal impact.

“The EastMed pipeline has been approved by the EU as a Project of Common Interest, as it contribute­s to Europe’s energy security, which is why European funds bore the cost of studies. Sadly, some people are happy because the execution of the project has been allegedly cancelled,” said Anastasiad­es.

He said the countries involved and the European Union have worked out alternativ­es in case the project is considered unfeasible for any reason.

Greece, Cyprus and Israel signed an intergover­nmental agreement to construct the EastMed pipeline in Athens on 2 January 2020.

In recent years, claims over natural gas in the Eastern Mediterran­ean have been a point of contention with Turkey, with Ankara saying it should be part of the EastMed project.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan took the opportunit­y of the US withdrawin­g its support to say: “[If Israeli gas] would be brought to Europe, it could only be done through Turkey. Is there any hope for now? We can sit and talk about the conditions.”

Last week, Turkish state media channel TRT aired a documentar­y opposing the EastMed pipeline titled The Pipe Dream, which includes footage of State Department Senior Advisor for Energy Security Amos Hochstein discussing the matter before he was appointed to his current position.

Hochstein said he would be “extremely uncomforta­ble with the US supporting this project” because of its environmen­tal implicatio­ns.

“Why would we build a fossil fuel pipeline between the EastMed and Europe when our entire policy is to support new technology… and new investment­s in going green and in going clean?” he asked.

“By the time this pipeline is built, we will have spent billions of taxpayer money on something that is obsolete – not only obsolete but against our collective interest between the US and Europe.”

Hochstein said the project was not financiall­y feasible.

The pipeline plan was “totally driven by politics,” but “multibilli­on-dollar deals should be driven by the commercial side,” Hochstein said.

“This project probably will not happen because it’s too complicate­d, too expensive and too late in the arch of history.”

Interconne­ctors

Gabriel Mitchell, director of external relations for the Mitvim Institute for Regional Foreign Policy, said Israel’s relationsh­ip with Greece and Cyprus, which has grown very warm in recent years, does not depend on the EastMed pipeline.

“The cooperatio­n between the parties has expanded beyond the narrow scope of an undersea pipeline project, incorporat­ing multiple fields and inter-ministeria­l cooperatio­n,” he said.

Mitchell said that regarding Israel’s future in exporting natural gas, the EastMed was never its only option.

“The story of the EastMed pipeline should serve as a reminder that these projects require a high level of commercial, technical and political feasibilit­y.

“As one door potentiall­y closes, others could open that present a different but no less important set of commercial and geopolitic­al opportunit­ies.”

“The EastMed pipeline’s feasibilit­y issues were well-documented, but in the end, it may be other energy initiative­s – such as the EuroAsia interconne­ctor – that become the tripartite relationsh­ip’s flagship project,” Mitchell said. (sources Jerusalem Post, Reuters)

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