Facing gas 'blackmail' by Russia, EU turns to Israeli Occupation

World

Published: 2022-06-14 14:11

Last Updated: 2024-04-19 00:41


Facing gas 'blackmail' by Russia, EU turns to Israeli Occupation
Facing gas 'blackmail' by Russia, EU turns to Israeli Occupation

The European Union wants to strengthen its energy cooperation with the Israeli Occupation in light of Russia's use of gas supplies to "blackmail" its members over the Ukraine conflict, European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said Tuesday, AFP reported.

"The Kremlin has used our dependency on Russian fossil fuels to blackmail us," she said in a speech at the Ben Gurion University in the southern of the Israeli Occupation

"Since the beginning of the war, Russia has deliberately cut off its gas supplies to Poland, Bulgaria and Finland, and Dutch and Danish companies, in retaliation for our support to Ukraine."

But Moscow's conduct "only strengthens our resolve to break free of our dependence on Russian fossil fuels," she said, noting the EU was "exploring ways to step up our energy cooperation with Israel," with work on an underwater power cable and a gas pipeline in the eastern Mediterranean.

The Israeli Occupation exports gas to Egypt, some of which is then liquefied and shipped to Europe. A significant increase in gas exports would require major long-term infrastructure investments.

In talks with Energy Minister Karine Elharrar on Monday, von der Leyen reiterated "the EU need for Israeli gas," the minister's spokesperson said.

The spokesperson said there had been talks since March on establishing the legal framework to enable more Israeli Occupation gas exports to Europe via Egypt.

Another option would be the EastMed project, a proposal for a seafloor pipeline linking the Israeli Occupation with Cyprus and Greece. But US President Joe Biden's administration has questioned the viability of the project, given its huge cost and the time it would take to complete.

Another proposal is a pipeline connecting the Israeli Occupation to Turkey.

The Israeli Occupation's ties with Ankara have thawed in recent months after more than a decade of frosty relations and analysts have said Turkey's desire for joint energy projects has partly triggered its outreach to the Israeli Occupation.

That pipeline project would cost $1.5 billion and take two to three years to complete, according to estimates.

The Israeli Occupation is estimated to have gas reserves of at least one trillion cubic meters, with domestic use over the next three decades expected to total no more than 300 billion.

Von der Leyen was due to hold talks with Prime Minister Naftali Bennett later Tuesday, before traveling on to Egypt.