Maritime Border Dispute Emerging Between Lebanon, Syria

Signs of a new border crisis have emerged between Lebanon and Syria, after the Syrian government signed with a Russian company a contract for oil exploration in the Mediterranean.
The block to be explored
intersects with Lebanese maritime areas for energy exploration along the
northern border.
Lebanon set the map of
the maritime blocks for oil and gas exploration in its economic waters several
years ago. The map highlighted a border dispute with Israel in the South,
before Damascus completed its own plan for energy exploration in the
Mediterranean, showing an intersection with the Lebanese map.
Earlier this month,
Syria signed a contract under which it granted a Russian company the exclusive
right to explore oil “in the offshore Block No. 1 in the Syrian exclusive
economic zone in the Mediterranean Sea, off the coast of Tartous Governorate,
up to the Syrian-Lebanese maritime borders, over an area of 2,250 square
kilometers.”
The Lebanese authorities
did not react to the signing of the contract although the block set for
exploration overlaps with the Lebanese areas No.1 and 2 and results in a clear
border dispute.
Lebanese diplomatic
sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that the issue has never been raised in the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs nor a decision has been taken to address Syria on
the matter.
Lebanese researcher and
oil expert Laury Haytayan told Asharq Al-Awsat that the disputed area ranged
between 750 and 1,000 square kilometers, saying the Lebanese authorities have
not taken any action since the Syrian announcement of the signing of the agreement
with Moscow.
The maritime border area
with Syria has been a point of contention since 2011. Lebanon unilaterally
designated border point No.6 in an official document submitted to the United
Nations in 2010, re-corrected it in 2011 by fixing point No.7 and subsequently
reported it to the UN.
Damascus objected to the
unilateral Lebanese demarcation of its exclusive economic zone in the north, by
sending a protest letter to the United Nations in 2014.
Haytayan noted that the recent development “calls for a position on the part of the Lebanese government, by either addressing the Syrian authorities about drilling in a disputed area… or about reaching an agreement over the border demarcation.”