by Hezi Sternlicht
"The Israel-Europe Gas Pipeline will allow Israeli gas to reach every home in Europe," Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz says • Ambitious infrastructure project, privately funded to the tune of NIS 20 billion ($5.5 billion), can be completed by 2025, he says.
National Infrastructure,
Energy and Water Minister Yuval Steinitz (center) with European energy
ministers, Monday
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Photo credit: Yehoshua Yosef |
National Infrastructure, Energy and Water
Minister Yuval Steinitz hosted a summit of European energy ministers on
Monday morning, where an agreement to build the longest underwater
natural gas pipeline in the world was announced.
In attendance were energy ministers from
Cyprus, Greece and Italy, along with the European Union's envoy for
energy and climate affairs.
"The Israel-Europe Gas Pipeline will allow
Israeli gas to reach every home in Europe," Steinitz said. "Never before
has there been such an ambitious infrastructure project in Israel."
Following the official signing, Steinitz took his colleagues on a flight tour of Israel's offshore gas fields.
According to Steinitz, the project, which is
currently in advanced stages of analysis and has already demonstrated
initial technical and commercial feasibility, can be finished by 2025;
or in other world within eight years.
"If we take the quickest route, this can be
reduced by a year or two," Steinitz estimated, allowing for the
possibility that all four countries could begin working on the pipeline
simultaneously. The overall cost of the project, estimated at around 20
billion shekels ($5.5 billion), will be covered entirely by the private
sector.
When asked if the pipeline agreement --
expected to be some 2,000 kilometers (around 1,200 miles) long -- poses a
threat to a parallel joint-pipeline agreement with Turkey, Steinitz
said the current deal does not reduce the importance of additional
potential projects with other countries.
"The celebratory meeting [Monday morning] and our shared
agreement to mobilize the Mediterranean pipeline project means that
Israel is not only accepted in the Middle East, but by Europe, as a
significant player in the international energy market," Steinitz said.
Hezi Sternlicht
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=41541
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