Leaders of Greece, Israel, Cyprus to sign gas pipeline deal
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades were
set Thursday to sign an agreement for a huge pipeline project designed to ship
gas from the eastern Mediterranean to Europe.
The move comes amid tensions with Turkey over its
own activities in the area and a contentious maritime deal with Libya expanding
Ankara's claims over a large gas-rich area of the sea.
The 2,000-kilometre EastMed pipeline will be able to
transfer between nine and 12 billion cubic metres a year from offshore gas
reserves between Israel and Cyprus to Greece, and then on to Italy and other
southeastern European countries.
As now designed, the pipeline would run from
Israel’s Levantine Basin offshore gas reserves to Cyprus, Crete and the Greek
mainland. An overland pipeline to northwestern Greece and another planned
undersea pipeline would carry the gas to Italy.
The pipeline is intended to provide an alternative
gas source for energy-hungry Europe, which is currently largely dependent on
supplies from Russia and the Caucasus region. The project, with a rough budget
of $6 billion, is expected to satisfy about 10% of the European Union's natural
gas needs. But it is also fraught with political and logistical complexities.
The discovery of hydrocarbon reserves in the eastern
Mediterranean has sparked a scramble for the energy riches and a row between
Cyprus and Turkey
Cyprus is divided into a Greek Cypriot south, where
the island nation's internationally recognized government is located, and a
breakaway Turkish Cypriot north backed by Turkey. The split followed a 1974
Turkish invasion after an aborted coup aiming to bring Cyprus under Greek rule.
Turkey already faces European Union sanctions over
ships searching for oil and gas off Cyprus, whose government in Nicosia is not
recognised by Ankara.
The Cypriot government meanwhile has licensed
Italian energy company Eni, France's Total, ExxonMobil and Texas-based Noble
Energy to carry out exploratory hydrocarbons drilling in the country's offshore
economic zone.
Anastasiades has said the EastMed pipeline, while
not aimed against Turkey, affirms that Greece and Cyprus hold sovereign rights
to the waters they control.
The EastMed project is expected to make Cyprus,
Greece and Israel key links in Europe's energy supply chain, while it also aims
to stymie Turkey's effort to extend its influence in the eastern Mediterranean
region.
'Peace and cooperation'
Turkey is also laying claim to large tracts under
Greek control in the Aegean Sea and off the Greek island of Crete. Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that no project in the area can proceed
without his country's consent following the maritime border agreement that
Ankara signed with Libya's Tripoli-based government.
Greece responded angrily to the Turkey-Libya deal
struck in November, expelling the Libyan ambassador and urging the UN to
condemn it. Part of the agreement sets a maritime boundary between the two
countries, which Greece says fails to take into account the island of Crete.
Erdogan said in November he envisaged joint energy
exploration activities with Libya in the eastern Mediterranean.
His government insists the Turkish Republic of
Northern Cyprus - recognised only by Ankara - has the right to explore around
the entire island. It says Turkey's own energy explorations off Cyprus are
intended to ensure that Turkish Cypriots get their fair share of the profits
from the island's gas reserves.
The EastMed alliance "is of enormous importance
to the state of Israel's energy future and its development into an energy power
and also from the point of view of stability in the region," Netanyahu
said in a statement issued as he left Israel for Greece Thursday.
Greek energy minister Kostis Hatzidakis called it
"a project of peace and cooperation" despite "Turkish
threats".
Avinoam Idan, a former Israeli government security
official who is now a geostrategy expert at Haifa University, said of the deal:
"It's important for Israel, it's important for the transit countries,
Greece and Cyprus, and of course Europe".
As the new source of energy would not compete with
Russian supplies to the EU, "there is no reason to see it as a big change
in the geopolitical dynamic in Europe's energy market", he told AFP news
agency.
The Greek economic daily Kathimerini said Wednesday
Athens and Nicosia had been in a hurry to finalise EastMed "to counter any
attempt by the Turkish neighbour to stop the project".
Israeli Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz has said the
pipeline would take up to seven years to build and that its advantages include
being less vulnerable to sabotage and not crossing many national borders to
reach markets.
Anastasiades said in an New Year's Day interview
with Cyprus' Phileleftheros newspaper that the construction agreement's signing
“sends messages in every direction.”
"Especially under current conditions, it
demonstrates the strong political will of the countries involved, as well as
the European Union, that they don’t accept Turkey’s unlawful actions,”
Anastasiades said.