by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
In interview on sidelines of regional gas forum in Cairo, Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz says Israel, Egypt have discussed how to extend cooperation on natural gas
Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz in Cairo, Monday
Photo: Reuters
Israel will begin
exporting natural gas to Egypt in a few months' time, a key step in the
country's plans to sell its expanding gas production abroad and bolster
diplomatic ties, Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz said on Monday.
Steinitz did not give a specific target for
initial exports, but said shipments would double after the huge
Leviathan field in the eastern Mediterranean becomes fully operational
in November.
Steinitz said Israeli exports to Egypt were
expected to reach 7 billion cubic meters annually over 10 years. About
half the exports were expected to be used for Egypt's domestic market
and half to be liquefied for re-export, he said.
Israel has discovered vast amounts of gas
since the early 2000s, signing deals to export to Egypt and Jordan. Its
production, currently around 10.5 bcm, is expected to more than double
in 2020, rising to 27 bcm in 2021.
In an interview on the sidelines of a
regional gas forum in Cairo, Steinitz said Israel and Egypt had
discussed how to extend cooperation on natural gas, including through
exports.
He also said Israel was hoping to sign a
deal for the construction of the 2,000-kilometer (1,243-mile) East Med
pipeline, which will cross from Israel and Cyprus into Greece and Italy,
"in a few weeks' time."
"Israel exporting natural gas to the Arab
world and also to Europe -- this is something that sounded like a dream
or a fantasy just 10 or 15 years ago," said Steinitz, the first energy
minister to visit Egypt since the 2011 uprising there.
The exports from Israel to Egypt will be
made under a landmark $15 billion natural gas export deal announced in
February 2018. In September, Israeli and Egyptian companies bought a 39%
stake in the EMG pipeline, paving the way for the deal to begin.
Partners in Israel's Tamar and Leviathan
offshore gas fields had said they would supply the private Egyptian
company Dolphinus Holdings with around 64 bcm of gas over a decade as
part of the deal.
The agreement has stirred controversy in Egypt, which until a few years ago exported gas to Israel.
Egypt is hoping to leverage its strategic
location bridging Africa and Asia and its well-developed infrastructure
to become a key trading and distribution center for gas in the region
and beyond.
It has made a series of its own big
discoveries in recent years, including Zohr, the largest gas field in
the Mediterranean, but also needs to meet rapidly increasing domestic
demand.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2019/01/15/israel-set-to-begin-exporting-gas-to-egypt-in-a-few-months-time/
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