Lebanon investigating location of natural gas field
Lebanon said it was looking into whether a natural gas find which Noble Energy said it discovered off Israel's
Mediterranean coast also fell under Lebanese waters, a charge Israel denied.
A US-Israeli exploration group said it had found large amounts of natural gas in the eastern Mediterranean that are
expected to meet Israeli gas demands for well over a decade.
Led by Noble Energy, the group said it found natural gas of more than 3 tcf (88 bn cm) 90 km from the Israeli
northern port of Haifa. But Lebanese authorities said it was not clear whether the basin fell only under Israel's
waters.
"Noble Energy's find proves that the (Lebanese) shore is rich in gas and that there is a possibility that we have a
common basin, between Lebanon and the Occupied Palestinian territories," Mohammed Kabbani, who heads a parliamentary
committee which overseas energy issues, told.
Kabbani had said that he feared that Israel "can extract mounts of gas from the depths of Lebanon's territorial
waters if there is a common gas basin."
"If that basin extends to Lebanese waters, then we want to warn this company from infringing on our rights," Kabbani
said, adding the parliamentary committee had requested the government take action.
Energy Minister Alain Tabourian said Lebanon was in the process of registering with the United Nations the
delineation of the country's exclusive economic zone waters to determine whether the gas find fell within it.
"Even if this basin is not common, there may be other common basins and we want to protect our rights," Kabbani said.
Delek Drilling, one of the partners in the US-Israeli consortium, denied the possibility that the discovery was
within Lebanon's territorial waters.
"An examination made with the Petroleum Commissioner showed that these claims are not correct and the location of the
license where Tamar 1 is being drilled was studied carefully and it was found that the entire area of the license was
within territorial waters of the state of Israel," it said.
Noble Energy owns 36 % of the Tamar site while Isramco Negev owns 28.75 % and Avner Oil Exploration and Delek
Drilling each hold 15.625 %. Dor Gas Exploration owns 4 %. Delek and Avner are units of conglomerate Delek
Group.
The Tamar-1 drilling site is located 90 km west of the northern port of Haifa. Analysts estimate the natural gas is
worth about $ 15 bn-$ 16 bn and will be sold starting in 2013. Noble, Delek and Avner are already producing natural
gas from a separate site off the coast of southern Israel that is expected to be depleted within five years.
