Lawyers say Israel could lose territory if it does not object to the Lebanese energy exploration tenders in court, or even militarily.
Amiram Barkat
Lebanon
is trying to redraw its border with Israel. Official Israeli sources
say that Lebanon is about to award offshore oil and gas exploration
licenses in areas that encroach on Israel's exclusive economic zone (EEZ).
It is unclear what Israel plans to do about this matter, which could
ignite the border dispute with Lebanon. However, international law
experts say that Israeli is liable to lose territory if it does not
object to the Lebanese acts in court, or even militarily.
In
early September, Lebanon published tenders for offshore oil and gas
exploration licenses in five blocks in its EEZ. Israeli sources who
examined the coordinates found that the area of the southernmost
license, Block 9, encroaches on the border that Israel claims for its
EEZ. This license is considered attractive with high chances of a major
natural gas discovery.
Petroleum
Commissioner Alexander Varshavsky presented the findings of the review
at an international energy conference in Cyprus two weeks ago. He
emphasized that Israel has refrained from taking a similar step, and did
not award oil and gas exploration licenses in disputed areas.
The issue is considered especially explosive in the internal Lebanese political arena. Hezbollah
and Shia Speaker of the Parliament Nabih Berri have in the past claimed
that Israel's Tamar and Leviathan gas fields are in Lebanese territory, even though they are both located south of the border that Lebanon claims.
Israel
and Lebanon are waging a public dispute over the border of their EEZs.
In 2010, Lebanon submitted to the UN its claim, based on the land border
set when the IDF withdrew from security zone in southern Lebanon in
2000. In the past, the US tried to no avail to mediate between the
parties. The area in dispute covers 850 square kilometers in a triangle
whose western apex is the Israeli-Lebanese land border and seaward base
is Israel and Cyprus's EEZs. Israel secured an achievement when it
signed an agreement on its maritime border with Cyprus in December 2010
on the basis of Israel's line.
Adv.
David Kornbluth, an expert in national borders, believes that Israel is
liable to lose its claim to the disputed area unless it takes active
steps in response to the Lebanese move. "Legal practice says that a
country that does not respond to such an act is considered as waiving
its claim," he told "Globes". He was a partner in setting the EEZ border
when he worked at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs legal department.
"Globes": What measures can Israel take?
Kornbluth: "There
is definitely room to demonstrate sovereignty along the Israeli line,
for example, patrols by Navy ships along it. In addition, there are
several formal actions that should be taken immediately, such as making
an official statement, approaching a third country considered as an
honest broker, and contacting the foreign companies participating in the
tenders to warn them that the area is in dispute."
Scores
of oil majors are participating in the Lebanese tenders. Most of the
companies avoid doing business with Israel for fear of jeopardizing
their interests in the Arab world.
© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd. 2013
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