Total-ENI-Novatek consortium bids for Lebanon offshore blocks

The logo of the French oil giant Total SA is seen at the entrance of the company headquarters in the La Defense business district, west of Paris, Tuesday Feb 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)

BEIRUTH / Reuters

The only bidder in Lebanon’s first tender for five offshore energy blocks was a consortium made up of France’s Total, Italy’s ENI and Russia’s Novatek, Minister of
Energy and Water Cesar Abi Khalil said.
The consortium submitted two bids for block 4 and block 9, Abi Khalil said in a statement on Facebook. Lebanon sits on the Levant Basin in the eastern Mediterranean along with Cyprus, Egypt, Israel and
Syria. A number of gas fields have been
discovered there since 2009, such as
the Leviathan and Tamar fields.
Block 9 borders Israeli waters. Lebanon considers Israel an enemy state and has an unresolved maritime border dispute with it over a triangular area of sea around 860 sq km that extends along the edge of three of the five blocks put up for tender.
The country relaunched the licensing round for five offshore blocks (1, 4, 8, 9 and 10) in January after a three-year delay due to political problems. “The results of the first licensing round were positive in that Lebanon managed to attract international companies with high expertise in gas field exploration and development, and in bringing petroleum to international markets,” Abi Khalil said.
Lebanon extended the bid deadline
in September because companies wanted more time and to see a long-awaited petroleum tax law which was then passed,
the Lebanese Petroleum Administration (LPA) has said.
A total of 51 companies qualified earlier in the year to bid in this round, according to the LPA. When the process was first launched in 2013, 46 companies qualified to take part in bidding, 12 of them as
operators, including Chevron Corp, Total SA and Exxon Mobil Corp.
The LPA will now evaluate the bids and present them to the energy minister by
November 13. Final approval will then
be sought from Lebanon’s council of ministers. The exploration phase lasts up
to five years with a possible one-year
extension, the LPA said.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend