Israel greenlights Karish gas production ahead of Lebanon deal

Leviathan natural gas field will need to extract more gas to extract more gas to increase
Israel’s Leviathan natural gas field will need to extract more gas to increase the amount of gas available for export. PHOTO: JACK GUEZ/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

Israel has given a hydrocarbon company permission to start operations at Karish, an offshore field at the heart of a maritime border agreement expected to be signed soon with Lebanon.

A statement from the energy ministry on Tuesday said it had given the London-based Energean “the approval to begin producing natural gas from Karish”.

Energean has said that its floating production storage and offloading vessel is due to start production at Karish in the third quarter but has not given a precise date.

Israel and Lebanon agreed earlier this month to set a maritime border for the first time and establish a mechanism for both countries to explore offshore gas fields.

That is despite the two neighbours having technically been at war for decades, although the last active conflict was in 2006.

The US-brokered deal is expected to be finalised on Thursday during a ceremony in the Lebanese town of Naqoura, with delegations from Israel and Lebanon signing the deal in separate rooms.

Under its terms, Israel retains full rights to develop the Karish field while Lebanon retains full rights in nearby Qana.

As Qana extends southward across a border known as Line 23, Israel will be entitled to a share of royalties through a side agreement with the operator, the French company Total.

(Al Jazeera)

The exploration of Karish’s 2.4 trillion cubic feet (68 billion cubic metres) of natural gas had drawn the wrath of Lebanon’s Hezbollah group, which had called the extraction of gas from the contested waters before the conclusion of any deal a “red line”.

However, Hezbollah is on board with the agreement, seeing it as a potential way out of Lebanon’s continuing economic crisis.

The offshore gas field is now set to join Tamar and Leviathan to become Israel’s third offshore rig providing natural gas, with each connected to the mainland by separate infrastructure.

Earlier this month, Energean began pumping gas to its floating production facility in Karish as part of reverse flow testing procedures approved by the Israeli government.

Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid, who is facing an election on November 1 and refused to bring the agreement before parliament for approval, said “the production of natural gas from the Karish platform bolsters Israel’s energy security, enhances our stature as energy exporters, strengthens Israel’s economy and helps in grappling with the global energy crisis”.

Gas exports to Jordan and Egypt would be able to increase, the energy ministry said, “and from there to additional countries in Europe that need natural gas sources in light of the global energy crisis”.