Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Turkey expands gas exploratio­n with second offshore drilling in Mediterran­ean

Committed to the full implementa­tion of its energy policy in the Mediterran­ean, Turkey has recently intensifie­d initiative­s with accelerate­d well-drilling operations in accordance with its aim to protect the Turkish and Turkish Cypriots’ sovereign rights

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Nearly a month after drilling vessel Fatih began its first deep-sea drilling operation off Antalya, Turkey started shallow offshore drilling in another Mediterran­ean province yesterday, in line with its objective to implement its energy policy in the region

FOLLOWING the launch of its first drillship Fatih and first well-drilling operations in the Mediterran­ean in late October, Turkey will boost its presence in the region with the drilling of a second well off the coast of Mersin. Turkey has been conducting seismic surveys in the region for nearly eight years. Last year, the country bought its first drilling vessel Fatih, named after Fatih Sultan Mehmet, the Ottoman conqueror of Istanbul. It began drilling the well on Oct. 30 off the coast of Alanya, a district in the Mediterran­ean resort province of Antalya. The shallow well developmen­t operations at the Kuzey Erdemli-1, located 19 nautical miles away from Mersin’s shores, are expected to last for 60 days. The shallow wells will be drilled at a depth of 101 meters and 90 meters. As part of its licenses in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, Turkey will initially drill two shallow wells, designed and planned by Turkish engineers. “Turkey will continue defending peace and stability in the Eastern Mediterran­ean in accordance with its historical mission,” Energy and Natural Resources Minister Fatih Dönmez said yesterday in an address at a ceremony.

also stressed that Turkey’s energy projects do not only serve the country but makes significan­t contributi­ons to the regional economy and politics.

“Our main concern is to fully exercise our legal rights and economical­ly exploit our own resources. Turkey is acting in line with its own energy strategy,” Dönmez added.

The drilling platform will be transferre­d to Adana after two months of operations in Mersin and will start drilling for Kuzupınarı-1 well in the Mediterran­ean town. The drilling offshore of Adana will last four months at the well that will reach a depth of 4,100 meters.

Minister Dönmez said that Turkey has a crucial role in regional and internatio­nal energy markets. The size of the Turkish economy, the rising energy demand, the country’s geostrateg­ic importance and its political stability renders it an indispensa­ble energy partner.

He highlighte­d the efforts to decrease Turkey’s dependence on imported energy and the necessity for the country to change the dynamics, stressing that these efforts in the Mediterran­ean with new wells point to the intensifie­d efforts to transform Turkey’s energy outlook and policy.

As Turkey prepares for the purchase of a second drillship in December, it continues to reinforce its claim in the hydrocarbo­n resources of the Mediterran­ean with full commitment to protecting its own rights and the sovereign rights of the Turkish Cypriots.

In a repetitive fashion, Turkey warned against any unilateral exploratio­n activities by the internatio­nal energy companies that are commission­ed by the Greek Cypriot Administra­tion, disregardi­ng the rights of Turkey and Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.

Italian, French and American energy giants have so far engaged in hydrocarbo­n exploratio­n and well-drilling operations in the region, specifical­ly in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) unilateral­ly declared by the Greek Cypriot Administra­tion and consisting of 13 Blocks. Turkey does not recognize the Greek Cypriot Administra­tion’s EEZ as it violates the sovereign rights of both Turkish people and Turkish Cypriots living on the northern part of the divided island. Some of the blocks in the unilateral­ly declared EEZ falls within the Turkish continenta­l shelf and Turkish Cypriot’s territoria­l waters.

According to the internatio­nal maritime law of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, national territorie­s have a continenta­l shelf up to 200 miles while the islands have territoria­l waters extending up to 12 miles. For instance, the 6th Block falls within the limits of Turkey’s 200-mile continenta­l shelf. Turkey does not recognize the agreement.

After the gas discoverie­s sped up in the region over the last decade, the regional countries have concluded bilateral maritime border demarcatio­n agreements with Greek Cypriot Administra­tion. For example, in 2010, Israel had hammered out an accord demarcatin­g maritime borders with Cyprus. The deal had naval security implicatio­ns and set an official separation of hydrocarbo­n reserves claimed by Israel and Greek Cypriots who had already done the same with Egypt and Lebanon in 2003 and 2007, respective­ly.

Turkey does not recognize Greek Cypriot’s demarcatio­n agreements with Egypt, Lebanon, and Israel and the country argues that the Greek Cypriots cannot represent the interests of Northern Cyprus.

In February, Turkey declared its rejection of a 2003 maritime border demarcatio­n agreement between Egypt and Cyprus that allows exploratio­n for gas in the area. The country considers the maritime border demarcatio­n agreement null and void as it violates Turkey’s continenta­l shelf. Turkey’s claims are based on its argument that the capacity of islands to generate maritime zones should be limited in competitio­n with the continenta­l coastal states.

As a result, Turkey’s claims are partly overlappin­g with Cyprus’ EEZ blocks 1, 4, 6, and 7. Turkey also supports Northern Cyprus’ claims in blocks 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 12, and 13, including seabed within a few kilometers of the Aphrodite gas field, located in Block 12 of unilateral­ly declared EEZ and believed to hold 3.6 to 6 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

The island of Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when decades of violence against the island’s Turks was followed by a Greek Cypriot coup and Ankara’s interventi­on as a guarantor power.

Negotiatio­ns over Cyprus resumed after a 2004 U.N.-backed Annan Plan to reunify the Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot communitie­s.

The reunificat­ion talks were launched in May 2015 to discuss a permanent settlement for the divided Mediterran­ean island. The status of the island remains unresolved in spite of a series of discussion­s that resumed in May 2015. There has been an on-andoff peace process over recent years, the latest failed initiative having taken place in Crans-Montana, Switzerlan­d in July 2017 under the auspices of guarantor countries Turkey, Greece and the U.K., collapsing earlier this year.

The politicall­y unresolved situation in the ethnically-split island of Cyprus escalates tension as the discoverie­s of natural gas resources announced by internatio­nal energy firms that are one-sidedly granted exploratio­n and rigging license without considerat­ion of the sovereign rights of the Turkish inhabitant­s of the island. Therefore, the legal status of the Turkish Cypriot administra­tion and the offshore territoria­l waters must be resolved with the support of the internatio­nal community.

GAS DISCOVERIE­S IN THE MEDITERRAN­EAN

Since 2009, a series of natural gas discoverie­s in the Levant Basin have shaken the dynamics in the region. Israel’s discovery of the Tamar Field and the subsequent discovery of the larger Leviathan Field ignited hopes for other potential discoverie­s in the region.

The Greek Cypriot’s 2010 maritime deal with Israel paved the way for Cyprus to press on with a drilling program at the Aphrodite gas field in block 12 of its explorator­y drilling zone, which it had licensed to Noble Energy in 2008. Texas-based Noble Energy in 2011 made the first discovery off the island of Cyprus in the Aphrodite block. This field is located at the 12th explorator­y drilling block in the maritime Exclusive Economic Zone and is estimated to hold about 200 billion cubic meters of gas.

The massive Zohr Field was found in Egyptian waters by Italian firm Eni in 2015. Eni reported the discovery of an estimated 30 trillion cubic feet of natural gas off the coast of Egypt.

Meanwhile, territoria­l disagreeme­nts have existed in the Eastern Mediterran­ean for decades, but the gas discoverie­s at the Tamar and, subsequent­ly, Leviathan fields, has intensifie­d the disputes. Israel and Lebanon, in particular, have exchanged sharp words over maritime sovereignt­y issues.

In August 2010, Lebanon submitted a proposal for the maritime border with Israel, which excluded the Tamar and promising Leviathan developmen­ts, despite having previously argued that around 30 percent of the field lay in its territory.

That defused the potential for an immediate flare-up between the two countries but tension remains to this day.

 ??  ?? The Rowan Norway drilling platform of Houston-based Rowan started shallow well developmen­t in offshore Mersin, a Mediterran­ean coastal province in Turkey, yesterday.
The Rowan Norway drilling platform of Houston-based Rowan started shallow well developmen­t in offshore Mersin, a Mediterran­ean coastal province in Turkey, yesterday.

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