Energy

Undersea gas fires Egypt's regional energy dreams

By AFP

A man sails a boat loaded with gas cylinders on the Nile River near the southern Egyptian city of Aswan on November 26th, 2017. [Khaled Desouki/AFP]

A man sails a boat loaded with gas cylinders on the Nile River near the southern Egyptian city of Aswan on November 26th, 2017. [Khaled Desouki/AFP]

Egypt is looking to use its vast, newly tapped undersea gas reserves to establish itself as a key energy exporter and revive its flagging economy.

Encouraged by the discovery of huge natural gas fields in the Mediterranean, Cairo has in recent months signed gas deals with Israel, Cyprus and Greece.

Former oil minister Osama Kamal said Egypt has a "plan to become a regional energy hub".

In the past year, gas has started flowing from four major fields off Egypt's Mediterranean coast, including the vast Zohr field, inaugurated on January 31st by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.

Discovered in 2015 by Italian energy giant Eni, Zohr is the biggest gas field so far found in Egyptian waters.

The immediate upshot has been that since September, the Arab world's most populous country has been able to halt imports of liquified natural gas, which last year cost it some $220 million per month.

Coming after a financial crisis that pushed Cairo in 2016 to take a $12 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund, the gas has been a lifeline.

Egypt's budget deficit, which hit 10.9% of gross domestic product (GDP) in the financial year 2016-17, has since fallen to 9.8%.

Gas production has now hit 184 million cubic metres a day.

Kickstarting exports

Having met its own needs, Cairo is looking to kickstart exports and extend its regional influence.

It has signed deals to import gas from neighbouring countries for liquefaction at installations on its Mediterranean coast, ready for re-export to Europe.

In September, Egypt signed a deal with Cyprus to build a pipeline to pump Cypriot gas hundreds of kilometres to Egypt for processing before being exported to Europe.

In February, Egypt inked an agreement to import gas from Israel's Tamar and Leviathan reservoirs.

A US-Israeli consortium leading the development of Israel's offshore gas reserves in September announced it would buy part of a disused pipeline connecting the Israeli coastal city of Ashkelon with the northern Sinai peninsula.

That would bypass a land pipeline across Sinai that was repeatedly targeted by extremists in 2011 and 2012.

The $15-billion deal will see some 64 billion cubic metres of gas pumped in from the Israeli fields over 10 years.

Ezzat Abdel Aziz, former president of the Egyptian Atomic Energy Agency, said the projects were "of vital importance for Egypt" and would have direct returns for the Egyptian economy.

They "confirm the strategic importance of Egypt and allow it to take advantage of its location between producing countries in the east and consuming countries of the West", he said.

Petro-processing dollars

The Egyptian state is also hoping to rake in billions of dollars in revenues from petrochemicals.

Its regional energy ambitions are "not limited to the natural gas sector, but also involve major projects in the petroleum and petrochemical sectors", said former oil minister Kamal.

Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Tarek al-Molla recently announced a deal to expand the Midor refinery in Cairo to boost its output by some 60%.

On top of that, the new Mostorod refinery in northern Cairo is set to produce 4.4 million tonnes of petroleum products a year after it comes online by next May, said Ahmed Heikal, president of Egyptian investment firm Citadel Capital.

That alone will save the state $2 billion a year on petrochemical imports, which last year cost it some $5.2 billion.

Egypt also is investing in a processing plant on the Red Sea that could produce some four million tonnes of petro-products a year -- as well as creating 3,000 jobs in a country where unemployment is rife.

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