Lebanon approves first offshore oil and gas exploration

Published December 15, 2017
Lebanon: President Michel Aoun heads the cabinet meeting at the presidential palace on Thursday.—Reuters
Lebanon: President Michel Aoun heads the cabinet meeting at the presidential palace on Thursday.—Reuters

BEIRUT: Lebanon on Thursday approved a first bid from an international consortium including France’s Total, Italy’s ENI and Russia’s Novatek to explore for oil and gas off the country’s Mediterranean coast.

The group was the only one to respond to a call for bids by the authorities in Beirut, with Leba­non’s attempts to begin offshore energy exploration in recent years hampered by political instability.

The government of Prime Minister Saad Hariri has made finding progress on the oil and gas prospects a priority since its formation in 2016 as Lebanon looks to tap potential reserves after major offshore gas discoveries by neighbouring Israel and Cyprus.

“The cabinet has approved the granting of exploration permits... in blocks 4 and 9,” Energy Minister Cesar Abi Khalil wrote on Facebook. The succesful bid from the consortium covers only two of five blocks that were offered by the Lebanese government.

Khalil said the next step would be for the government to sign an official agreement with the group and that explorations would not start before the beginning of 2019.

Lebanon is hoping the discovery of energy resources off its coast will provide a much-needed boost for its battered national coffers.

Hariri insisted the offer from the consortium was “good” and marked an important step forward after lengthy delays.

“After five years of discussions on this question, the government will be in a position to sign the first oil and gas exploration deal,” the premier said.

Analyst Diana Kaissy, who heads the Lebanese Oil and Gas Initiative think-tank, said it was “impossible to know” the extent of the accessible reserves before exploration operations begin.

Published in Dawn, December 15th, 2017

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