Into the blue
May 11, 2017
Potential is the most important word to keep in mind when thinking about a future Lebanese oil and gas industry. In November (provided there’s a functioning government at the time), the country is scheduled to begin offshore exploration, which could provide a revenue stream flowing decades into the future and kickstart a local industry services sector. Fifty-one mostly foreign companies have pre-qualified to get in on the action (see list below), and despite weaker prices per barrel than Big Oil would like, there is clearly appetite for investment in east Mediterranean acreage – industry slang meaning, in this case, drilling and production rights in blocks of a country’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). Evidence, from both drilling in the neighborhood and abundant subsea survey data covering nearly all of offshore Lebanon, suggests there could be good news in the country’s near future. That said, detailed predictions about what to expect (which companies will bid to win a contract, how much gas or oil will be found, how much it will be worth) remain as useless today as they have been previously. What is undeniable, however, is that Lebanon’s slice of the gas-rich East Med is on radars near and far.