Thursday, January 13, 2011

Gas, Greed, Borders and War


The Muqata

Gordon Gecko once said "Greed, for lack of a better word, is good."

With the massive oil findings this past year, Israel is debating that concept... sort of.

Greed is bad, if the investor, the one who took the risk, is the one who gets super-rich - according to some in our country. But it's not greedy to change the rules and thus take much higher tax revenues then what was originally promised to those oil search firms.

But this post isn't about that debate, as important as it is. This post is about Lebanon. Greedy Lebanon.

Lebanon has been making moves lately to try to grab Israel's oil fields away and claim them for themselves.

Lebanon has run all the way to the UN to get that ball rolling. While originally, and officially the UN originally said they weren't getting involved. Now it seems that they might be.

Lebanon is claiming that Israel's gas is located off their coast and belongs to them.

So I decided to clarify a few concepts for the readers before the discussion really gets out of hand.

There are various types of maritime borders.

For our purpose, we will be discussing the area called the "Exclusive Economic Zone" or the EEZ.

In the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS or the Law of the Sea treaty)

Specific legal regime of the exclusive economic zone

The exclusive economic zone is an area beyond and adjacent to the territorial sea, subject to the specific legal regime established in this Part, under which the rights and jurisdiction of the coastal State and the rights and freedoms of other States are governed by the relevant provisions of this Convention.


160 countries have signed and ratified this treaty. Israel has not signed or ratified it. The US signed, but did not ratify it. Lebanon has both signed and ratified it.

What the EEZ does is define the maritime borders and economic exploitation rights of each country within their EEZ. There are a few countries with clear disputes based on overlapping claims (or in some cases, overreaching claims). Israel should not be one of them.

While not a signatory, Israel's neighbors, Cyprus, Lebanon and Egypt are. The EEZ borders of each country are relatively clear, and (until now) undisputed because it's not such a technically difficult region to demarcate (thought the demarcation process is a very technical one). and even though Lebanon never formally demarcated/declared their EEZ.

Furthermore, until now, Israel has been claiming this specific region also by right of the Continental Shelf, which doesn't even require the UNCLOS treaty for demarcation.

To further bolster Israel's claim, Israel and (Greek) Cyprus recently reconfirmed their EEZ border demarcations after Israel's gas find, confirming that Cyprus has no claim to that region. Turkey was very upset by this, even though North Cyprus's EEZ is only connected to Lebanon, not Israel.

In the map below you can see where Israel's EEZ is, and the location of the dig sites within the EEZ.


The cream colored areas are the exploration rights zones, not the size of the gas fields. (I apologize for the 1967 armistice line markings on the map).

Here is Cyprus's EEZ (along with Lebanon):


Questions might arise if the underground gas reserves actually straddle the border of a neighboring EEZ, but they don't.

But that hasn't stopped Lebanon has claimed it is possible the basin extends to Lebanese waters. Delek Drilling, one of the partners in the U.S.-Israeli consortium, denied this: "An examination made with the Petroleum Commissioner showed that these claims are not correct and the location of the license where Tamar 1 is being drilled was studied carefully and it was found that the entire area of the license was within territorial waters of the state of Israel." Delek Group chairman Gabi Last added, "The border of Israel's exclusive economic zone waters passes to the north of the Tamar oil drilling, and significantly so."

But the truth won't stop Lebanon from creating a false narrative.

Unfortunately, since this is the UN we are talking about, we can now expect yet another international attack on Israel's basic rights.


Lebanon is greedy. Lebanon knows it can probably count on the UN to attack Israel in the arena, and perhaps even win.

But as I said at the beginning "Greed is good".

Israel might actually fight this one to win.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

It would be interesting to see a map showing not only each country's territorial borders, in this part of the Mediterranean, but also their exclusive economical zones. It seem to be that if Israel is to exercise their rights of an EEZ of 200 miles it is on behalf of other countries in the region. The close proximity of different nations in the region makes EEZ considerably smaller than the legal 200 that Israel claims. For instance , the distance between Haifa and Limassol i roughly 170miles. It seem to me that any nation whose 200 mile EEZ border overlaps the gas find could technically participate in a negotiation of the maritime borders that not yet seem to have bee established correctly. I understand that Israel alone without encouragement has drawn it's maritime border with Lebanon - why no negotiation with Lebanon when they negotiate with Cyprus. Technically Israel is in war with Lebanon so one wonder if it can be legal in according international law to exploit the recourses without an agreement with them. I believe that even the distant Egypt have an economic zone that interferes. Another complicated matter is if the EEZ between Cyprus and Israel is split 50/50 what's the implication for the outer EU borders. Seem to me that this is a true can of worms. I'm sure that that Israel will defend this valuable price with military force but the question is if this is possible without negotiation. What if Lebanon starts to cooperate with a energy thirsty - like China - I'm sure they would be happy to help out to defend a country to weak to defend it's own interest. You can just look at a map to see that Lebanon is closer to Cyprus than Israel is, and that the leviathan gas find is clearly within their economic zone. That however will not matter at all if they can't match their legal right with equal military strength.

Unknown said...

Another thing I just realized. The distance between The Gaza Strip (The Coastline of the Palestinian State if you recognize a two state solution)and Cyprus is just 234 miles. This would put the Laviathan Gas find in the middle of the Palestines EEZ.