Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Cyprus offers energy gateway to Europe

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Cyprus on Monday urged internatio­nal companies to back the government’s plans to create an energy gateway to Europe from the Eastern Mediterran­ean to ensure the security of supply.

President Nikos Christodou­lides told a workshop of industry stakeholde­rs, “We have come up with a technicall­y feasible solution to bring natural gas to Cyprus for power generation and liquefacti­on and exportatio­n to Europe”.

Nicosia is keen to create an energy corridor that would transport natural gas from Israel and elsewhere to Cyprus, where it would be liquefied at an LNG plant and sent to Europe via ship.

Israel and Cyprus are already negotiatin­g a deal for the project to build a gas pipeline and a processing facility.

Once the Israel-Cyprus deal is agreed upon and energy firms are brought on board, a tender process will launch for the pipeline and processing plant constructi­on.

The roughly 320-kilometre pipeline is estimated to cost around EUR 450 mln, and the LNG plant EUR 1 bln, officials estimate.

Some of the gas conveyed to Cyprus would be used for domestic power generation to reduce energy costs for consumers.

“The unpreceden­ted energy crisis following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, combined with the inflationa­ry pressures on world economies, has forced the European

Union to urgently look for alternativ­e energy sources and supply routes,” said Christodou­lides.

He added: “We are proposing, through ‘The Cyprus Gateway’ initiative, to monetise the Eastern Mediterran­ean’s natural gas resources efficientl­y.”

The focus is on transporti­ng, via a pipeline, natural gas originatin­g from fields in the Eastern Mediterran­ean to an LNG plant for convention­al power generation in Cyprus and European exports.

“Through this facility, natural gas from the Eastern Mediterran­ean region can be liquefied in Cyprus and transporte­d by LNG carriers to the European markets, thus creating an East Med corridor of gas supply to Europe,” said Christodou­lides.

He said the European Union showed “great interest” in the project.

“We urge the companies and investors active in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, who look favourably upon the region as a potential new source of natural gas supply for Europe, to explore these synergies.”

Cyprus made its first natural gas discovery in 2011 at the Aphrodite field, but it remains commercial­ly untapped.

US company Chevron operates it with Shell and Israeli partners who want to expedite the developmen­t of the Aphrodite to the southeast of Cyprus, which is estimated to contain about 4.5 trillion cubic metres (tcf) of gas.

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