Lebanon Announces Offshore Blocks

Friday, April 5, 2019

Lebanon announced on Friday five offshore blocks to be included in its coming bidding round for energy exploration and production licences, including four along disputed maritime borders.

Offshore energy development has been a central ambition for successive governments in cash-strapped Lebanon, but political paralysis has caused years of delays.

Blocks 8 and 10 both include waters also claimed by Israel, while blocks 1 and 2 include waters claimed by Syria. One of the two blocks for which licences were awarded last year, block 9, is also on the disputed maritime border with Israel.

Energy Minister Nada Boustani announced details in a televised news conference of the upcoming licensing round, which she said on Thursday had been approved by the cabinet and would have a bid deadline in early 2020.

A consortium of France's Total, Italy's Eni and Russia's Novatek won the first licensing round last year for blocks 4 and 9 and plans to drill its first exploration wells by the end of this year. It has said it will avoid disputed waters.

"We expect greater participation in the second round of licensing," Boustani said, adding that representatives from Russia's Lukoil, Spain's Repsol and Britain's BP had visited Lebanon in the last few weeks.

"For sure Total and Eni are still interested," she added.

Lebanon is on the Levant Basin in the eastern Mediterranean where a number of big sub-sea gas fields have been discovered since 2009 in waters off Cyprus, Israel and Egypt.

Beirut tried to launch its first offshore exploration in 2013, but domestic political problems delayed it until 2017.

For this round, it has merged the prequalification process for licence bidders into the bidding process.

Pro-transparency group, the Lebanese Oil and Gas Initiative, urged the government to reconsider the decision, saying it might make the process more opaque.


(Reporting by Angus McDowall Editing by Edmund Blair)

Categories: Energy Middle East Offshore Energy Activity Natural Gas Government Regulations

Related Stories

ADNOC Gas Signs $3B LNG Supply Deal with India’s HPCL

Philippines Makes First Offshore Gas Discovery in Over a Decade

Low Demand, High Supply Keeps Asia LNG Spot Prices Flat

PV Drilling’s Jack-Up Rig Returns to Asia Ahead of April Drilling Ops

DOF Bags Two Deals in Asia-Pacific Region

Petronas Enlists MISC for FPU Job at Gas Field Offshore Brunei

Eni Expands Asian Footprint with Long-Term LNG Contract in Thailand

ADES Nets $63M Contract for Compact Driller Jack-Up off Brunei

Venture Global, Tokyo Gas Ink 20-Year LNG Supply Deal

Aramco Expands US Partnerships with $30B in New Deals

Current News

Conrad, Empyrean Agree Settlement Framework Over Duyung PSC Interests

Northern Offshore’s Energy Emerger Rig Up for Drilling Job off Oman

Petronas Plans Ramp-Up in Exploration, Production Over Three Years

Australia and Timor-Leste Push to Advance Greater Sunrise Gas Field

MODEC, Eld Energy Partnership Targets Low-Carbon FPSO Power

JERA Lifts First LNG Cargo From Barossa Gas Project in Australia

Inpex Moves to Accelerate Indonesia’s Abadi LNG Project

Chevron in Final Talks with Eneos, Glencore on Singapore Assets Sale

Seadrill Firms Up Offshore Drilling Workload with Multi-Region Contract Awards

Turkish Petroleum, Chevron Discuss Joint Oil and Gas Exploration

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com