Israeli gas exports to Egypt resume but in small quantities

Israeli gas exports to Egypt resume but in small quantities
Israeli natural gas exports to Egypt have resumed after a disruption last weekend, but in small volumes.
2 min read
02 November, 2023
Egypt relies on Israeli gas imports to meet some of its domestic demand [Getty]

Israeli natural gas exports to Egypt have resumed after a disruption last weekend but in small volumes, an official in Egypt's petroleum ministry said on Thursday, without specifying the current flow.

Three people with knowledge of the matter also told Reuters on Tuesday the flow had resumed, with two saying it had only been reduced, not halted.

The disruption in exports follows Israel's suspension of production at Chevron's Tamar gas field on 9 October, shortly after the start of the Gaza war. In parallel, supplies were also redirected through a pipeline in Jordan, rather than a direct subsea pipeline to Egypt.

Egypt's cabinet said in a statement last Sunday that gas imports fell to zero from 800 million cubic feet per day (mcfd), contributing to a deficit of power generation that has caused months of power cuts.

Perspectives

An official in the Leviathan project, however, said on Tuesday that "exports to Egypt are ongoing continuously, which shows the project's commitment to its customers and the Egyptian market. Gas production at Leviathan has continued throughout this period."

One source with knowledge of the matter said that a brief outage at Israel's offshore gas field Karish led to more gas from Leviathan being pumped into Israel, reducing exports but not halting them.

Egypt relies on Israeli gas imports to meet some of its domestic demand, as well as for re-exports that have been a significant earner of scarce foreign currency.

Egypt, where there is growing demand for gas from the population of 105 million, has also seen its own gas production decline to a three-year low this year. The country has grappled with power shortages in the summer as heatwaves have driven up demand for cooling.