Leviathan partners approve $3.75bn gas-development plan

MEDITERRANEAN SEA, ISRAEL - FEBRUARY 2013:  In this handout image provided by Albatross, The Tamar drilling natural gas production platform is seen some 25 kilometers West of the Ashkelon shore in February 2013 in Israel. The offshore Tamar drilling site which was originally dispatched from a shipyard in Texas at the end of last year is due to start producing natural gas next week. Over the past few years Israel has suffered from a shortage in natural gas, but with the new platform that weighs 34,000 tons and will be mainly operated by Israelis, the US company Nobel Energy which owns a 36% stake in Tamar, hopes to change Israel's energy situation as well as the economy as a whole.  (Photo Photo by Albatross via Getty Images)

 

Bloomberg

The companies that own the rights to Leviathan, Israel’s largest natural gas reservoir, approved a plan to allocate $3.75 billion to develop the offshore site. Israel’s main gas equity index rose the most in almost five months.
The partners, led by Delek Group Ltd. and Houston-based Noble Energy Inc., have agreed on a final investment decision, which lays out how the companies intend to spend the funds to develop Leviathan over the next three years, according to a Tel Aviv Stock Exchange filing on Thursday.
The decision allows the Leviathan partners to “launch the largest energy project in the history of Israel, that will also serve as one of the region’s energy anchors,” Yossi Abu, chief executive officer of Delek Drilling LP, said in an e-mailed statement. Delek Drilling holds a 22.7 percent stake in Leviathan and is a unit of Delek Group.”We will continue our activity to develop and expand our oil and gas assets in Israel and Cyprus,” he said.
Leviathan, Israel’s biggest gas find, has the potential to generate billions of dollars in domestic and export contracts, including a $10 billion deal the partners signed in September with Natural Electric Power Co. of Jordan. The project is to start producing in 2019, both for the Israeli market and regional sales. Leviathan’s partners are in negotiations to sell gas to Turkey or to Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s liquefied natural gas plant in Egypt. The Tel Aviv Oil & Gas Index climbed 2.4 percent, the most since Sept. 26, to 1,134.77 at 9:46 a.m. local time.
The investment decision covers the first stage of Leviathan’s development, allowing for a maximum annual production of 12 billion cubic meters of gas. Later, the partners plan to extract an additional 9 billion cubic meters per year, earmarking it for export.
Most of the $3.75 billion has been raised, after Delek agreed to a $1.75 billion loan this week from banks led by JPMorgan Chase & Co. and HSBC Holdings Plc. Minority partner Ratio Oil Exploration 1992 LP has already raised its share of the funds through a mix of equity, debt sales and bank loans.
Noble has yet to announce its funding plans, but the company expects to spend about $500 million this year developing Leviathan, according to a presentation last week. Through its units Delek Drilling and Avner Oil Exploration LP, Israeli billionaire Yitzchak Teshuva’s Delek Group holds a 45.3 percent stake in Leviathan. Avner is in the final stages of merging into Delek Drilling. Noble owns 39.7 percent of the field, and Ratio has the remaining 15 percent.

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