'Colonial exploits': Israel plans to loot Palestinian gas reserves

Israel has awarded licenses to six companies, including Italy’s ENI, Dana Petroleum, a UK-based subsidiary of the Korea National Oil Corporation, and Israeli company Ratio Petroleum to areas falling within Palestinian territory.

Experts say that the act of awarding licenses suggests that Israel is after Palestinian natural resources. / Photo: TRT World
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Experts say that the act of awarding licenses suggests that Israel is after Palestinian natural resources. / Photo: TRT World

In the middle of Israel’s ongoing assault on Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government has quietly doled out licenses to local and international companies to find and extract gas from areas considered to be Palestinian maritime zones.

This happened in October, just weeks after Israel launched its war on the enclave, and sparked strong reactions from rights groups and activists who expressed concerns over Israel’s intent to seize Palestinian natural resources.

In February, legal centre Adalah sent a letter to the Israeli energy minister, while Foley Hoag, a law firm representing pro-Palestinian organisations such as al Haq, al Mezan Center for Human Rights, and the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, sent notices to the companies awarded the licenses.

Their demands were clear: the licenses should be revoked, any planned exploration halted and a bar on the issuance of more licenses for areas falling within Palestinian maritime territory.

While the organisations still await a response, the issue is being raised on international levels.

In Italy’s Parliament, the Greens and Left Alliance put forward a resolution to suspend any activity related to Gaza due to the involvement of Italian company ENI.

While the resolution did not pass, it led to questions over the government’s stance.

Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani responded by saying that ENI’s “contract is still being finalised” and there was “currently no exploitation of resources,” according to local media reports.

However, that has done little to assuage the fears of rights groups and activists.

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'Stealing resources'

Suhad Bishara, legal director at Adalah, said the act of awarding licenses suggests that Israel is after Palestinian natural resources.

“We are concerned that Israel would unilaterally explore and exploit the natural resources in Palestine’s maritime waters for its own financial and colonial gains,” she said.

According to Adalah, Israel has awarded licenses to six companies, including Italy’s ENI, Dana Petroleum, a UK-based subsidiary of the Korea National Oil Corporation, and Israeli company Ratio Petroleum. These three companies are the ones that have been issued notices.

The licenses were awarded after a fourth round of bidding launched by the Israeli government in 2022.

The areas they cover include Zone G, which lies adjacent to the shores of Gaza.

Around 62 percent of Zone G falls within the maritime boundaries declared by the state of Palestine in 2019, in accordance with provisions of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), of which Palestine is a signatory, according to the legal centre.

Israel has also issued tenders for Zones H and E, it added, pointing out that around 73 percent of Zone H falls within Palestine’s declared maritime boundaries, along with 5 percent of Zone E.

“Despite not being a party to UNCLOS, Israel has responded to the Palestinian declaration by maintaining that, since Israel does not recognise Palestine as a sovereign state, Palestine lacks the authority to declare its maritime boundaries and waters,” Adalah said in a February statement.

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'Disregard for international law'

Bishara emphasised that only Palestinians can be “the exclusive legitimate beneficiaries of the exploitation of these resources,” adding that Israel has a history of violating and abusing Gaza’s resources.

In a recent article for Middle East Eye, economist and researcher Walid Abuhelal also pointed out that in addition to Gaza’s natural gas, Israel has been “stealing Palestinian natural gas from the Meged oil and gas field in the occupied West Bank under the pretext that the field is located to the west of the armistice line of 1948.”

British Gas confirmed in 1999 that Gaza Marine, a natural gas field just off the Gaza coast, has around 1.1 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves, according to Abuhelal.

However, the fact that these were awarded during the deadly war on Gaza “highlights Israel’s complete disregard for international law and the catastrophic consequences of its assault on Palestinians in Gaza,” said Bishara.

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