Gas Line Between Egypt and Israel Blown Up by Unidentified Attackers – Report
2
February, 2020
Israel
has reportedly been supplying natural gas to Egypt since late 2019. A
supply line was attacked late on Sunday in the Sinai Peninsula,
according to a report by Al Jazeera Arabic .
Tel
Aviv has commented on an Al Jazeera Arabic report of an attempt to
sabotage the Egypt-Israel pipeline. Israeli Energy Minister Yuval
Steinitz stated that the gas supply remains unaffected and a probe
into the attack has been launched.
"At
this time, the natural gas is flowing from Israel to Egypt. The
matter of the explosion, as it was, was examined by the ministry in
coordination with all relevant parties", Steinitz said, cited by
the Israeli state-run Kan (Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation)
media outlet.
Earlier
on Sunday, Al Jazeera reported that the attack against Egypt-Israel
pipeline took place in Egypt's Bir Al-Abd, located in the northern
Sinai area. The attackers reportedly remain unidentified, and no
militant or terrorist group has claimed responsibility.
A
tweet reads: "Urgent | Sources to Al Jazeera: Gunmen blow up the
gas line between # Egypt and Israel in the Bir al-Abd area in North
Sinai".
Netizens
have shared alleged footage from the scene of the incident, blaming
militants for the Sunday's attack.
The
same gas lines were blown up three times during the first six months
of 2011, before Cairo suspended gas supplies to Tel Aviv, The
Jerusalem Post said.
The
new agreement on gas supplies between Egypt and Israel reportedly
follows a $15 billion decade-long deal signed by Delek Drilling and
Houston-based Noble Energy in February 2018 to supply 64 billion
cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas to Egypt from the Leviathan and
Tamar gas fields, located off Israel.
The
Leviathan gas field, discovered in December 2010, is one of the
largest recently-discovered gas reserves in the world, according to
reports. According to the US Geological Survey, Leviathan’s volume
of undiscovered reserves amounts to some 620 billion cubic meters of
natural gas.
The
Tamar gas field is located in Israel's exclusive economic zone, some
80 kilometers (50 miles) west of Haifa. It is considered to have
proven reserves of 200 billion cubic meters.
The
Sinai Peninsula remains
a hotbed of
terrorist activity. Egypt regularly carries out anti-terrorist raids
to purge hardcore militants reportedly infesting the region.
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