Egypt Downplays Israeli Pipeline’s Effect on Suez Canal

File photo of Suez Canal. Anadolu news agency
File photo of Suez Canal. Anadolu news agency
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Egypt Downplays Israeli Pipeline’s Effect on Suez Canal

File photo of Suez Canal. Anadolu news agency
File photo of Suez Canal. Anadolu news agency

Cairo on Tuesday downplayed the impact of the Israeli Ashkelon-Eilat oil pipeline on the revenues and competitiveness of the Egyptian Suez Canal.

A rare official statement by Egypt's state-owned Suez Canal Authority (SCA) said the pipeline, once re-operated, would slightly affect the total flows of trade crossing the Suez Canal.

“It is expected that the impact of the pipeline, once operational, will not exceed 12-16% of the volume of crude oil trade heading north, and not of the total trade traffic crossing the canal,” it said.

The SCA statement noted that the pipeline links the Eilat oil port on the Red Sea coast with the Ashkelon oil port on the Mediterranean coast and that the canal route will remain the shortest and most secure link between East and West since shipping containers passing through the canal can transport larger quantities of goods at a cost lower than any land routes.

The statement said SCA's revenues come from diverse sources, adding the containers bring in 50 percent of the canal's total revenues while crude oil contributes only 6.5 percent.

Dr. Ahmed Kandil, the head of energy studies program at Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, said the economic benefits of the oil pipeline are “not huge.”

He said political tensions and regional geopolitical dimensions would make it risky for international institutions to think about funding the pipeline.

The Suez Canal is one of Egypt's main sources of national income and foreign currency reserves.



Iraq Will Not Be Just a ‘Spectator’ in Syria, Prime Minister Says

Iraq's Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani delivers a speech during the Spain-Iraq business meeting in Madrid, Spain, 28 November 2024. (EPA)
Iraq's Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani delivers a speech during the Spain-Iraq business meeting in Madrid, Spain, 28 November 2024. (EPA)
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Iraq Will Not Be Just a ‘Spectator’ in Syria, Prime Minister Says

Iraq's Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani delivers a speech during the Spain-Iraq business meeting in Madrid, Spain, 28 November 2024. (EPA)
Iraq's Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani delivers a speech during the Spain-Iraq business meeting in Madrid, Spain, 28 November 2024. (EPA)

Iraq will not act as a mere spectator in Syria where it believes groups and sects are victims of ethnic cleansing, Iraq's prime minister said on Tuesday, according to a readout from his office of a phone call to Türkiye's president.

Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, who discussed the situation in Syria with Türkiye's Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said Iraq would exert all efforts to preserve the security of Iraq and Syria, according to the official readout of the call.

"What is happening in Syria today is in the interest of the Zionist entity, which deliberately bombed Syrian army sites in a way that paved the way for terrorist groups to control additional areas in Syria," the Iraqi prime minister's office quoted Sudani as saying.

Factions opposed to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad seized the city of Aleppo last week in their biggest advance in years. Iraq's Shiite-led government has close relations with Iran, which is an ally of Assad, and Iraqi militia fighters have fought on Assad's side in the war.

Two Iraqi security sources and a senior Syrian military source told Reuters on Monday that hundreds of Iraqi Shiite militia fighters had crossed the border late on Sunday to help Assad's army fight the opposition’s advance.

The head of Iraq's Popular Mobilization Forces, which includes the major Shiite militia groups aligned with Iran, said no group under its umbrella had entered Syria.

The Syrian opposition fighters have said their advance over the past week met little resistance, in part because the most powerful of Iran's allies, Lebanon's Hezbollah group, had pulled its forces out of Syria to battle Israel in Lebanon.

Israel, which has long struck what it says are Iran-aligned military targets in Syria, has stepped up such strikes over the past 14 months as it battled Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.