Israel Government Approves Major Offshore Gas Deal
The Israeli government on Sunday approved a major deal with a consortium including U.S. firm Noble Energy on natural offshore gas production in the Mediterranean, the prime minister's office said.
The agreement, which was announced on Thursday and is expected to face a parliamentary vote, aims to end months of uncertainty and set a framework for the exploitation of gas discoveries.
It is expected to raise major new government revenues and could provide Israel with strategic leverage in the region if it becomes a gas exporter.
"This money will benefit education, health, social welfare and other national needs," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said ahead of the cabinet vote, which passed 17-1.
Noble and locally based firm Delek have since 2013 produced gas from the Tamar field off the Israeli coast.
They have also teamed up to develop the offshore Leviathan field, considered to be the largest in the Mediterranean.
The agreement stipulates that Delek sells its 31 percent share of Tamar within six years, and Noble decrease its holdings there from 36 to 25 percent to no longer be the largest shareholder.
It also contains amendments to an earlier version, such as linking the price of gas to an energy index, which is meant to lower costs for consumers.
The consortium committed to invest $1.5 billion to develop the Leviathan field over the next two years.
Israel has agreed not to change fiscal and regulatory rules related to the gas industry for a decade as long as the consortium abides by its commitments.
The talks have been controversial, with many fearing the deal would overly favour the companies involved.
The agreement notes that Israel's anti-trust authority objects to it on the grounds that it does not allow for sufficient competition.
To circumvent that obstacle, Netanyahu's inner cabinet in June declared gas production to be linked to national security, thus allowing the government to override laws related to monopolies.
Netanyahu has pushed hard to speed up gas production in the Mediterranean, drawing criticism from political opponents who accuse him of not ensuring sufficient benefits for the public in the negotiations.
"The true interests of the state of Israel require the approval of this outline as quickly as possible," he said on Sunday, while declaring he was "not impressed by populism."
Dov Khenin, a lawmaker from the Joint List, was one of the opposition members to speak out against the agreement, listing a series of reasons why it was tantamount to a "concession agreement" to Noble and Delek.
Khenin on Thursday noted the lack of a mechanism to control gas prices, which would enable them to rise.
He also said the government agreed to put off the deadline to developing Leviathan until 2020, and pointed out that Israel was not insisting on another pipeline to lead the gas from Tamar being installed, as many had hoped would be the case.