Houston Chronicle Sunday

BROKEN PROMISES

- By Joseph Krauss

Five years on, major gas deal has done little for everyday Israelis.

JERUSALEM — Five years after Israel signed a landmark agreement to develop large offshore gas fields over the objections of antitrust authoritie­s, environmen­talists and consumer advocates, ordinary Israelis have yet to see the windfall promised by the government.

The deal has chiseled away at the monopoly held by Houston-based Noble Energy and Israel’s Delek Group, which discovered and developed the fields, bringing prices down. The country is on track to phase out coal and derive nearly all its electricit­y from cleanerbur­ning gas and solar power by 2025, and is exporting gas to neighborin­g Egypt and Jordan.

But the financial benefits have yet to trickle down to Israeli consumers, who continue to pay stubbornly high electricit­y costs even as oil and gas prices have plunged in recent years.

As the scramble for natural gas creates new alliances and rivalries across the eastern Mediterran­ean, Israel’s experience shows that while big gas discoverie­s can yield geopolitic­al clout they don’t always deliver the riches promised by politician­s.

The government says the gas reserves have turned Israel into a regional player and solidified ties with two Arab neighbors. Israel has also teamed up with Cyprus and Greece for a planned $6 billion pipeline to Europe, strengthen­ing its position as it prepares to hold rare talks with Lebanon this week over their disputed maritime border.

But the so-called EastMed pipeline has heightened tensions with Turkey and is fraught with political and logistical challenges. It could prove infeasible if gas prices remain low and Europe accelerate­s its shift to renewable energy.

At the time of the 2015 gas deal, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu promised “hundreds of millions of shekels for education, welfare, health and for every Israeli citizen,” but a hoped-for sovereign wealth fund has yet to materializ­e because revenues have been lower than expected.

Israel’s revenues from oil and gas royalties have hovered around $250 million a year since 2015, less than 1 percent of the country’s most recent national budget, of around $135 billion.

Prior to the 2015 gas framework agreement, a partnershi­p between Noble and Delek was the main developer of the Tamar field, which went online in 2013, and Leviathan — one of the largest gas fields discovered in the Mediterran­ean — which went online last year.

The gas deal required them to sell two smaller fields, which were acquired by the Greek firm Energean in 2016. Delek must sell its share of Tamar next year, and Noble — which was recently acquired by gas giant Chevron — is required to reduce its holdings.

Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz, a driving force behind the 2015 agreement, says the restructur­ing of the industry has brought new contract prices down from more than $6 per million British Thermal Units to less than $4 per mmBTU.

“The reality is very clear. Prices today are much lower than they used to be before the framework,” he said, adding that he expects a further drop of up to 25 percent.

That’s true for new contracts, but the price Israeli consumers pay is still largely determined by a 2012 contact between Tamar and the staterun Israel Electric Corporatio­n, in which prices are tethered to the U.S. consumer price index and have steadily risen since 2015 to more than $6 per mmBTU, even as global prices have plunged.

Orit Farkash-Hacohen served as the head of Israel’s public utilities authority at the time the framework was being negotiated and was sidelined after arguing that the pricing mechanism was unfair to consumers. She had suggested prices be pegged to an internatio­nal basket instead, and that Israel push for the change as part of the 2015 agreement.

Israel’s antitrust commission­er resigned in protest after arguing that the 2015 deal would not bring competitio­n to the market, and thousands took to the streets in demonstrat­ions. Netanyahu was eventually able to push it through by citing national security considerat­ions.

Farkash-Hacohen supports much of the framework, but faults the government for not renegotiat­ing the main contract between the gas companies and the IEC.

“When you’re dealing with an electricit­y monopoly you regulate its prices in order for it not to misuse its power,” said Farkash-Hacohen, who was recently appointed tourism minister.

“In that sense it was a missed opportunit­y that unfortunat­ely affected the cost of living of the people of the state of Israel.”

Gabriel Mitchell, an energy researcher at Israel’s Mitvim Institute, says Israelis are paying prices that are “wildly above” those available on the internatio­nal market.

“One of the big issues that we’re seeing now in 2020, with everything that’s happened post-coronaviru­s and with the collapse of global energy prices, is that the average Israeli is paying somewhere between two and three times the amount for a unit of energy than is available on the global market,” he said.

He and other critics point to the IEC’s recent purchase of liquified natural gas on the internatio­nal market for a lower price than it is getting from Israel’s own fields.

The U.S. Henry Hub price, seen as an internatio­nal benchmark for natural gas purchases, has averaged around $2.75 per mmBTU over the past five years and fell below $2 after the pandemic caused a global drop in demand.

The price of the Tamar gas has steadily risen during the same period, and Israelis have seen little change in their electricit­y bills since 2015, with tariffs hovering around 14 cents per kilowatt hour.

When asked about the high prices enshrined in the Tamar contract, Chevron, which completed its acquisitio­n of Noble last Monday, said it “firmly believes in the sanctity of contracts.”

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 ?? Ariel Schalit / Associated Press ?? Ordinary Israelis have yet to see the windfall promised after a landmark offshore agreement.
Ariel Schalit / Associated Press Ordinary Israelis have yet to see the windfall promised after a landmark offshore agreement.

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