The Borneo Post

Israel supreme court strikes down landmark gas deal

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s top court struck down a landmark deal regulating exploitati­on of Mediterran­ean gas reserves, in a major defeat for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who called the ruling ‘ mystifying’.

A panel of Supreme Court justices said in their ruling that a clause in the plan that prevented it from being changed for a decade was unacceptab­le.

“We have decided to cancel the gas deal because of the stability clause” that would have barred future government­s from altering the deal, they said.

The court however suspended the ruling for a year to enable the parliament to amend the agreement.

Critics of the deal between the Israeli government and a consortium, including US firm Noble Energy, praised the ruling while Netanyahu said it threatened the developmen­t of Israel’s gas reserves.

Israel’s developmen­t of its Mediterran­ean reserves hold serious implicatio­ns for the country’s efforts toward energy independen­ce.

It could also have an impact on regional diplomacy since Israel is expected to export some of its gas.

Netanyahu, who pushed forward the deal and even appeared at the court to defend it, used an obscure clause to override the anti- trust authoritie­s.

That allowed it to move forward with the approval of the economy minister – a portfolio he holds after the previous one resigned over the gas deal.

The court ruling was praised by members of the opposition parties, some of whom were part of the petition against the deal.

Opposition leader and Labour head Isaac Herzog called the court’s decision “correct and courageous”.

“The government can’t bind its hands and judgement,” he said on Twitter of the so- called stability clause.

Netanyahu disagreed, saying the decision posed a “severe threat to the developmen­t of Israel’s gas reserves.”

“Israel is perceived as a country with exaggerate­d legal interventi­on, in which it is hard to do business,” he said in a

The government can’t bind its hands and judgement.

Isaac Herzog, Opposition leader and Labour head

statement.

“Nobody has reason to celebrate the fact the gas might remain in the depth of the sea, and hundreds of billions of shekels won’t reach Israeli citizens,” he said.

“We’ll find other ways to overcome the severe damage to Israel’s economy following this mystifying ruling.”

Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked called the ruling a “crude and unnecessar­y interventi­on in a government decision”.

“It is unacceptab­le that the government holds the responsibi­lity to the economy and prosperity of the state, but remains without the necessary authority to take action,” she said in a statement.

The deal would now have to return to parliament, where its supporters would face fierce opposition and a narrow majority that might not ensure its passing in a similar format.

The Leviathan consortium, however, remained upbeat on the possibilit­y of moving ahead with the planned developmen­t of the reservoir.

“The court in its ruling accepted the entire gas deal except for the stability clause,” they said in a statement.

“The judges also realise the necessity of regulatory stability and creating conditions to enable the necessary investment­s to seek and develop gas reservoirs.

“We call upon the government to swiftly regulate the stability conditions so we can meet the deal’s goals, first and foremost developing Leviathan by 2019,” it said.

The deal, signed in December with Noble and its Israeli partner Delek, would have regulated the developmen­t of the Leviathan field in the eastern Mediterran­ean, one of the biggest recent natural gas discoverie­s, in addition to other issues.

The consortium is said to have agreed to invest US$ 1.5 billion to develop the Leviathan field over the next two years.

Failing to meet the requiremen­t would have allowed the government to back out of a commitment not to alter fiscal and regulatory terms for the gas industry until 2025.

Israel has been trying to extract offshore gas since the discovery of the Tamar and Leviathan fields in 2009 and 2010.

Production has begun in Tamar, but the far larger Leviathan has been hit by a series of delays. — AFP

 ??  ?? An Israeli flag flutters outside the Bank of Israel building in Jerusalem. Israel’s top court on Sunday struck down a landmark deal regulating exploitati­on of Mediterran­ean gas reserves, in a major defeat for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who...
An Israeli flag flutters outside the Bank of Israel building in Jerusalem. Israel’s top court on Sunday struck down a landmark deal regulating exploitati­on of Mediterran­ean gas reserves, in a major defeat for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who...
 ??  ?? Qatar’s state-funded broadcaste­r Al-Jazeera announced a fresh round of job cuts with around 500 positions being lost, most of them at the network’s Doha headquarte­rs. — Reuters photo
Qatar’s state-funded broadcaste­r Al-Jazeera announced a fresh round of job cuts with around 500 positions being lost, most of them at the network’s Doha headquarte­rs. — Reuters photo

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