The Jerusalem Post

Too hot to handle? Shell’s Gaza gas field sale hits problems

Gaza Marine field developmen­t held up by Hamas seizure of Strip

- • By RON BOUSSO

LONDON (Reuters) – It may prove to be Royal Dutch Shell’s hardest sell. The Anglo-Dutch group is struggling to find a buyer for its gas field off the Gaza Strip, even among energy companies long used to dealing with projects fraught with political and security risks.

At least one European company has shown interest in the undevelope­d Gaza Marine field following a reconcilia­tion deal in October between the two main Palestinia­n factions, a source involved in the talks said.

But the firm’s discussion­s over the field, located about 30 km. off the Gaza coast, have ground to a halt since tensions in the wider region have taken a fresh turn for the worse, the source told Reuters.

“Until the political situation is resolved I really can’t see anything happening here,” he said.

Gaza Marine has long been seen as a golden opportunit­y for the cash-strapped Palestinia­n Authority to join the Mediterran­ean gas bonanza, providing a major source of income to reduce its reliance on foreign aid.

Shell became the field’s main shareholde­r and operator when it acquired BG Group in 2016 for $54 billion. Since announcing the BG purchase the previous year, Shell has sold around $25b. in assets to reduce its debt, and hopes to reach $30b., by the year-end.

According to two industry sources, Shell is in talks with the Palestinia­n Investment Fund to find a buyer for the energy giant’s 55% stake in Gaza Marine.

Both Shell and the PIF, which is running the sale process and itself holds a minority stake, declined to comment.

Plans to develop the field – estimated to hold over 1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, the equivalent of Spain’s consumptio­n in 2016 – were put off several times over the past decade. The delays were due to internal Palestinia­n rivalry and conflict with Israel, as well as economic reasons, industry sources and former BG employees told Reuters.

Fatah signed the reconcilia­tion deal with Hamas. This allowed the Palestinia­n Authority government to take office in Gaza, and PIF chairman Muhammad Mustafa said after the deal that efforts were under way to revive the Gaza Marine project as soon as possible.

Trump

However, a flaring of violence on the West Bank since US President Donald Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital last month has highlighte­d the risks involving the project, the source involved in the talks said.

Gaza Marine, discovered at the end of the last century, lies between two rapidly expanding gas hubs in Egypt and Israel, both of which have attracted huge investment­s in recent years.

The developmen­t of Gaza Marine, though relatively small compared with the giant Eni-operated Zohr field in Egypt or Noble Energy’s Leviathan field in Israel, is estimated to cost around $1b.

Gas from the field would run power stations in Gaza and the West Bank town of Jenin, and could even be delivered to Jordan. “It is a field with a lot of potential if we could unlock its value,” one source said.

Attempts to develop the field were put on hold repeatedly after Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007.

Israel then put an economic blockade on Gaza, raising questions about the financing of the project and the sharing of future profits among the Palestinia­ns. This made any progress with the developmen­t impossible, according to a former senior BG employee.

Israel has, however, said in the past it supports the field’s developmen­t.

“Gaza Marine has not only an economic dimension, it also has a strategic dimension and diplomatic considerat­ions,” Maj.-Gen. Yoav Mordechai, the top IDF liaison officer with the Palestinia­ns, told Reuters.

“But its operation is a question of the geopolitic­al situation. Certainly not with Hamas there. Certainly not in the absence of diplomatic arrangemen­ts. Because it is a dramatic energy source,” Mordechai said.

Shell is unlikely to go ahead with the developmen­t of the field in the foreseeabl­e future, according to several sources. The company is also weighing the future of its large gas facilities in Egypt, which it likewise acquired from BG.

 ?? (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) ?? A MAN WAITS with his bicycle to fill a bottle with fuel at a gas station in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip.
(Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) A MAN WAITS with his bicycle to fill a bottle with fuel at a gas station in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip.

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