Egypt expects first Israeli gas by year-end, oil minister says
ABU DHABI (Bloomberg) - Egypt expects to begin receiving natural gas from Israel by the end of 2019, the oil minister said, fulfilling a $15 billion deal that will position the North African country as an energy re-export hub on Europe’s doorstep.
Egypt will initially receive about 200 million standard cubic feet per day of the gas, with supplies rising eventually to a daily 500 million sometime in 2020, the minister Tarek El-Molla said Tuesday in an interview in Abu Dhabi.
Israel’s Delek Drilling LP, Noble Energy and Egyptian East Gas Co. signed a deal last year to buy control of the East Mediterranean Gas Co. pipeline, which connects southern Israel to Egypt’s Sinai peninsula and was initially built to export Egyptian gas to Israel. The link has been idle for about six years due to a domestic gas shortage and repeated militant attacks on an overland stretch of pipeline in the Sinai.
The gas agreement has added an economic dimension to a relationship dominated by security since the two countries signed a peace treaty that changed the face of the Middle East four decades ago. It also advances Egypt’s plan to capitalize on its own giant Zohr field and supply gas-hungry Europe.
El-Molla also said:
- Egypt plans a tender for oil and gas exploration in its western Mediterranean fields in the first quarter of 2020
- Country has given initial approval for BP’s sale of its interests in the Gulf of Suez concession to Dragon Oil
- Egypt canceled its export tender for liquefied natural gas this month due to “very low” prices and because it would “rather not sell at a loss”
- The Damietta LNG plant will restart near the end of the year, with exports beginning at 500 MMcfd and increasing to 700 million in 2020
- The Idku LNG plant currently exports from 600 MMcfd to 1 billion
- Egypt currently produces 7 Bcfd of gas and will reach about 7.5 Bcfd by year-end
- Country is now meeting all its domestic gas needs of 6 Bcfd, with the rest being exported