Lebanon has again extended the deadline for applications to explore for hydrocarbons in eight offshore blocks, the energy ministry said on Friday.
The deadline had already been extended several times, most recently from June until December 15.
Lebanon’s energy ministry said that caretaker minister Walid Fayyad had pushed it back again to June 30, 2023 without detailing way.
Lebanon formally delineated its maritime border with Israel in October after years of U.S.-mediated talks. It had hoped this would pave the way for an influx of bids for oil and gas exploration in its waters.
The previous six-month extension was taken “based on the recommendation of the Lebanese Petroleum Administration” and would “create an acceptable level of competition among international oil and gas companies,” the energy ministry said at the time.
But a source with knowledge of the process said the first extension was granted because there had been no applications.
Lebanese officials, bankers and the powerful Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah say oil and gas exploration will pull the country of a three-year economic collapse that has pushed eight out of ten residents into poverty.
But those hopes have been slow to materialise.
Lebanon’s first licensing round in 2017 saw a consortium of France’s Total, Italy’s Eni and Russia’s Novatek win bids to explore two offshore blocs known as Blocs 4 and 9.
They did not find a commercially viable amount of hydrocarbons in Bloc 4, off the coast of Beirut. Planned drilling in the southern Bloc 9 was postponed.
Novatek pulled out of the consortium in September amid concerns about sanctions on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine, a source with close knowledge of the withdrawal told Reuters.
On the other side, TotalEnergies on Monday said it was working towards exploiting its new Lebanon Block 9 offshore gas project from next year, adding that it would likely select the vendor for a new drilling rig in the the first quarter of 2023.
“Pre-orders have also been placed with suppliers for equipment required,” the company added in a statement.
Total said its chief executive and chairman Patrick Pouyanné had confirmed these objectives when he recently met with Lebanon’s caretaker energy minister, Walid Fayad, at the firm’s Paris headquarters.
In October, The French oil and gas major reached a deal with the Lebanese government on the fate of the gas field, as a landmark maritime border agreement with Israel was coming into force.
Offshore areas in the eastern Mediterranean and Levant have yielded major gas discoveries in the past decade. Interest in them has grown since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine disrupted flows.
The initial exploration licence for Block 9 was held by a consortium of TotalEnergies, Italy’s Eni and Russia’s Novatek, but the structure of the deal had been restructured after Novatek exited the group as a result of the war in Ukraine.
Source: Reuers.com

