Lebanon to Get Egyptian Gas via Syria in Plan to Ease Crisis

The energy ministers of Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Syria meet in Amman. (Petra News Agency)
The energy ministers of Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Syria meet in Amman. (Petra News Agency)
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Lebanon to Get Egyptian Gas via Syria in Plan to Ease Crisis

The energy ministers of Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Syria meet in Amman. (Petra News Agency)
The energy ministers of Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Syria meet in Amman. (Petra News Agency)

Egyptian natural gas will be piped to Lebanon via Jordan and Syria to help boost its electricity output under a plan agreed by the four governments on Wednesday to ease a crippling power crisis.

The plan, which an Egyptian minister said would be implemented as soon as possible, is part of a US-backed effort to address Lebanon’s power shortages using Egyptian gas to be supplied via an Arab pipeline established some 20 years ago.

Life in Lebanon has been paralyzed by the crisis that has deepened as supplies of imported fuel have dried up. It is part of a wider financial crisis that has sunk the Lebanese currency by 90% since 2019.

The plan is however complicated by US sanctions on the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad. Lebanese officials have called on Washington to grant an exemption.

Damascus has said it is ready to cooperate.

The plan was approved by ministers from Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and Egypt at a meeting in Amman.

“We have put a roadmap with the ministers so that within the coming few weeks we can ensure that everything is ready so that we can after this review begin pumping gas at the earliest opportunity,” Egypt’s petroleum minister Tarek El Molla said.

Lebanon hopes to get enough gas to generate 450 megawatts (MW) of power at a power plant in the north and is working with the World Bank to secure financing, energy minister Raymond Ghajar said.

“In future there is the possibility of importing electricity from Jordan also through Syria after repairs to areas damaged by war,” he said.

Syria would make every effort for the plan to succeed, Syrian oil minister Bassam Tohme said.

The United States has said it is in talks with Egypt, Jordan and the World Bank to help find solutions to the crisis.

The Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah, designated a terrorist group by the United States, has meanwhile announced that it is bringing fuel oil from Iran to ease the crisis.

The Lebanese presidency said last month Washington had decided to help with a plan providing Egyptian gas to Jordan for generation into electricity to be transmitted to Lebanon via Syria, as well as to facilitate the transfer of natural gas to Lebanon.

The United States has imposed tough sanctions on the Syrian government. On a Beirut visit last week, US Senator Chris Van Hollen told Reuters ways were being looked at to address the complication despite the sanctions.

Lebanon’s state-owned power company is generating minimal amounts of power, leaving businesses and households almost entirely dependent on small, privately-owned generators. Industry experts put Lebanon’s peak power demand at 3,500 MW.



Emirates Airline to Resume Flights to Beirut

Emirates Airline Boeing 777-300ER planes are seen at Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates February 15, 2019. REUTERS/Christopher Pike/File Photo
Emirates Airline Boeing 777-300ER planes are seen at Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates February 15, 2019. REUTERS/Christopher Pike/File Photo
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Emirates Airline to Resume Flights to Beirut

Emirates Airline Boeing 777-300ER planes are seen at Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates February 15, 2019. REUTERS/Christopher Pike/File Photo
Emirates Airline Boeing 777-300ER planes are seen at Dubai International Airport in the United Arab Emirates February 15, 2019. REUTERS/Christopher Pike/File Photo

Emirates airline will resume flights to Beirut on February 1 after a four-month suspension triggered by conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, a statement said on Friday.

The Middle East's biggest airline will first offer a daily return flight and scale up to two services per day from April 1, AFP quoted the statement as saying.

Emirates will also resume a daily flight to the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, from February 1, it added.

The Dubai-based, state-owned carrier was one of several regional airlines to suspend Beirut services in late September as tensions soared between Israel and Hezbollah.

A truce came into effect on November 27, ending over a year of hostilities.