Israel - The Natural Gas Solution
Photo by: Marc Israel Sellem
Israel - The Natural Gas Solution
By SHLOMO MAITAL12/05/2011
Long before piping gas onshore is done, Israel must plan strategically how to exploit optimally its gas resources. Here are some options.
“IF MOSES HAD TURNED RIGHT instead of left when he led his people out of the Sinai Desert,” goes an old joke, “the Jews would have had the oil and the Arabs would have ended up with the oranges.” We can’t tell that joke any more. And you can blame oil geologist Joseph Langotsky.
Langotsky insisted for years there was oil and gas offshore in Israel’s territorial waters. Few listened. Finally, exploratory drilling commenced. Now, two major gas fields have been discovered in the Mediterranean, named Tamar and Leviathan. The latter is said to be the biggest gas find in the world in a decade. Tamar is named for Langotsky’s granddaughter. Leviathan means “whale” in Hebrew and indeed is a whale of a find – new estimates show Leviathan has some 16 trillion cubic feet of gas, worth (at current European market prices, one cent per cubic foot) over $160 billion.
Tamar has an estimated eight trillion cubic feet of gas, and production will begin in 2013. Moreover, the American firm Noble Energy, which owns 40 percent of Leviathan, is now running drilling tests for what it believes could be three billion barrels of oil or more around Leviathan, worth over $300 b. in today’s prices, or 1.5 times Israel’s annual Gross Domestic Product. The question is – what should Israel do with this new, incredible windfall? In March, the Knesset passed legislation approving the Sheshinski Committee recommendations for taxing profits of the natural gas companies. The tax rate will be 52-62 percent and will generate additional tax revenues, according to Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz, of about NIS 1 b. yearly, for 30-40 years, starting in 2015.
Steinitz told “The Jerusalem Post,” “This annual amount will not change the world, but altogether, it is an enormous sum that can serve education, welfare, defense and the entire Zionist endeavor. Our children and maybe our grandchildren will benefit.”
Steinitz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fought a valiant battle against the gas companies, led by billionaire Yitzhak Tshuva, who lobbied fiercely to defeat the gas tax law and escape the higher tax payments.
Now that the tax issue is settled, a major dilemma is emerging – how to optimize the use of the gas. If our children and grandchildren are truly to benefit, Minister Steinitz, you and your government must think out of the box. Think “GasTech” – fund and build technology- intensive industries that use natural gas, rather than just export the raw gas. Why should Israel behave like a Third World nation that can only export cheap raw commodities, instead of high-priced industrial products? TO UNDERSTAND WHY GASTECH makes sense, some background information is useful. Worldwide, 29 billion barrels of crude oil are consumed yearly, along with three trillion cubic meters of natural gas, equivalent to 18 billion barrels of oil. In addition, seven billion tons of coal are produced, equal to 35 billion barrels of oil.
Natural gas is 87 percent methane, CH4, a hydrocarbon. When burned, methane produces much less carbon dioxide than other fossil fuels, per unit of heat. Hence, a shift to natural gas can forestall the pace of global warming and climate change, especially when gas replaces dirty coal. (The Israel Electric Corporation currently uses imported coal to make half of its electricity.) The proportion of fossil fuel energy derived from gas worldwide is likely to rise – gas burns cleaner than coal or oil, it is relatively cheaper (as oil prices rise) and there are proportionately more gas reserves than oil. According to British Petroleum, the world has 46 years’ worth of proven oil reserves (at current usage rates), but 60 years’ worth of gas reserves, and the latter number rises daily. We have 130 years’ worth of coal reserves, but burning coal to make electricity is increasingly ruining our climate. Burning a ton of coal generates 4-5 tons of carbon dioxide. Natural gas generates half that, for the same heat equivalent.
Huge amounts of oil and natural gas are trapped in shale – rock in which oil and gas are trapped. Anew way to extract oil and gas from shale called “fracking” is now feasible and widely used, especially in America. By this method, small explosions create fractures in the shale, into which oil and gas seep and are then pumped to the surface. America has large oil and gas shale deposits. In the long run, America’s dependence on oil will diminish as “fracking” boosts both gas and oil production and gas provides 40 percent of America’s energy needs, compared with 20 percent today.
Israel too has shale oil deposits in the Negev. But more immediately, the Tamar gas field is 90 km (54 mi) offshore, in the Mediterranean, and three miles deep, and its gas will reach Haifa in 2013. Leviathan is 130 km (78 mi) offshore. It will take longer to develop.
Piping the gas onshore from both fields will cost billions of dollars. Long before this is done, Israel must plan strategically how to exploit optimally its gas resources. Here are some options.
LNG (Liquid Natural Gas): Israel can act like Algeria, Trinidad and Qatar and build plants that cool the gas to minus 260 degrees F, liquefy it to 1/600th of its volume and ship it abroad in special LNG ships. I asked Prof. Yehuda Hayut, former Haifa University president and an expert on shipping, whether LNG is safe in a terrorridden Mideast.
“LNG is a viable and very efficient way to transport gas,” he answered. “LNG ships ply many trade routes from the Middle East and North Africa to the U.S. and Europe.
There are special safety measures when these vessels enter a port and the record is very safe.” In 50 years of LNG use, no accidents have been recorded. Constructing an LNG plant and building or leasing LNG ships takes enormous resources. And it is still raw gas that is being sold. LNG’s price is less than the crude-oil energy equivalent.
GTL (Gas to Liquid): Qatar has gas reserves larger than Leviathan. It is also a benchmark leader in gas-based industry and technology. Qatar has a revenue-sharing deal with global oil giant Royal Dutch Shell to produce 140,000 barrels a day of clean diesel, and 120,000 barrels of gas condensate, from offshore natural gas. Israel should seek a similar deal, or build a GTL plant on its own. The Qatar process is said to be secret, based on cobalt catalysts. Israel’s creative chemical engineers should be set to work at once to develop our own version.
Strategically, an Israel self-sufficient in gasoline and diesel fuel is a powerful advantage in the unstable Mideast. With gasoline now priced at 7.39 shekels per liter (or $8.15 a gallon), there is no time to waste.
CNG (Compressed Natural Gas): Bottled compressed natural gas can run cars and trucks, in place of gasoline. This could reduce Israel’s crude oil imports sharply.
Petrochemical Industry: Natural gas can become the basis of an expanded profitable petrochemical industry, producing fertilizers and plastics, for example. Such industry already exists in Haifa. Some experts think the gas can be piped to this existing site, where new plants can be built.
Haifa residents recall, however, that a Katyusha rocket hit the refineries in 2006, in Lebanon War II. Others think the gas should be piped to a new, safer petrochemical site in the Negev, far from population centers.
At present there is global overcapacity in petrochemicals and prices are low. Again, creative ideas are needed to add value to raw natural gas, through technology, in ways other countries find hard to imitate.
A Neaman Institute report shows that Israel has 400 chemical plants, generating about a third of all industrial production and exports and employing 30,000 workers.
There is also a strong supply of chemical engineers. Yet only 4 percent of the Chief Scientist’s R&D grants for innovation go to this industry, compared with over a third for communications. This imbalance must be repaired. Sharon Kedmi, Director General of the Ministry of Industry, told me his ministry is actively studying so-called “Newtech” projects, including how best to use natural gas in industry. Both the Finance and Industry Ministries must plan carefully to avoid “Dutch disease” – the Netherlands’ currency appreciated when huge gas reserves were discovered, ruining its industrial exports.
Almost everything in the Mideast becomes a political dispute. Gas is no exception. There are conflicting claims over rights to the offshore gas. Lebanon claims Israel is stealing its gas. So does Gaza.
Wisely, Israel signed an agreement with Cyprus last December, clearly delineating the sea border between the two nations.
Cyprus stands to benefit a lot from Leviathan, because part of the gas field belongs to it. Hopefully Israel and Cyprus will collaborate to develop the field. Turkey strongly protests, claiming the Greek Cypriots are scalping the rights of Turkish Cypriots. And in the background lurks the shaky supply of Egyptian gas to Israel, halted by a saboteur’s bomb, and recently threatened again by a bomb that luckily failed to explode. Though the flow of Egyptian gas to Israel has resumed, it is unclear whether Egyptian gas will continue to flow unhindered, in the wake of the deposing of President Hosni Mubarak. Any delay in developing Tamar and Leviathan will thus be dangerous.
Perhaps the only loser in this story is Langotsky. He had to drop a limited partnership formed to finance exploration, when his partner, mining tycoon Benny Steinmetz, bailed out, only two months before exploratory drilling began. Langotsky will ironically not profit at all from the gas wealth he was instrumental in generating. • The writer is senior research fellow, at the S. Neaman Institute, Technion.
Photo by: Marc Israel Sellem
The Natural Gas Solution
By SHLOMO MAITAL12/05/2011
Long before piping gas onshore is done, Israel must plan strategically how to exploit optimally its gas resources. Here are some options.
“IF MOSES HAD TURNED RIGHT instead of left when he led his people out of the Sinai Desert,” goes an old joke, “the Jews would have had the oil and the Arabs would have ended up with the oranges.” We can’t tell that joke any more. And you can blame oil geologist Joseph Langotsky.
Langotsky insisted for years there was oil and gas offshore in Israel’s territorial waters. Few listened. Finally, exploratory drilling commenced. Now, two major gas fields have been discovered in the Mediterranean, named Tamar and Leviathan. The latter is said to be the biggest gas find in the world in a decade. Tamar is named for Langotsky’s granddaughter. Leviathan means “whale” in Hebrew and indeed is a whale of a find – new estimates show Leviathan has some 16 trillion cubic feet of gas, worth (at current European market prices, one cent per cubic foot) over $160 billion.
Tamar has an estimated eight trillion cubic feet of gas, and production will begin in 2013. Moreover, the American firm Noble Energy, which owns 40 percent of Leviathan, is now running drilling tests for what it believes could be three billion barrels of oil or more around Leviathan, worth over $300 b. in today’s prices, or 1.5 times Israel’s annual Gross Domestic Product. The question is – what should Israel do with this new, incredible windfall? In March, the Knesset passed legislation approving the Sheshinski Committee recommendations for taxing profits of the natural gas companies. The tax rate will be 52-62 percent and will generate additional tax revenues, according to Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz, of about NIS 1 b. yearly, for 30-40 years, starting in 2015.
Steinitz told “The Jerusalem Post,” “This annual amount will not change the world, but altogether, it is an enormous sum that can serve education, welfare, defense and the entire Zionist endeavor. Our children and maybe our grandchildren will benefit.”
Steinitz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fought a valiant battle against the gas companies, led by billionaire Yitzhak Tshuva, who lobbied fiercely to defeat the gas tax law and escape the higher tax payments.
Now that the tax issue is settled, a major dilemma is emerging – how to optimize the use of the gas. If our children and grandchildren are truly to benefit, Minister Steinitz, you and your government must think out of the box. Think “GasTech” – fund and build technology- intensive industries that use natural gas, rather than just export the raw gas. Why should Israel behave like a Third World nation that can only export cheap raw commodities, instead of high-priced industrial products? TO UNDERSTAND WHY GASTECH makes sense, some background information is useful. Worldwide, 29 billion barrels of crude oil are consumed yearly, along with three trillion cubic meters of natural gas, equivalent to 18 billion barrels of oil. In addition, seven billion tons of coal are produced, equal to 35 billion barrels of oil.
Natural gas is 87 percent methane, CH4, a hydrocarbon. When burned, methane produces much less carbon dioxide than other fossil fuels, per unit of heat. Hence, a shift to natural gas can forestall the pace of global warming and climate change, especially when gas replaces dirty coal. (The Israel Electric Corporation currently uses imported coal to make half of its electricity.) The proportion of fossil fuel energy derived from gas worldwide is likely to rise – gas burns cleaner than coal or oil, it is relatively cheaper (as oil prices rise) and there are proportionately more gas reserves than oil. According to British Petroleum, the world has 46 years’ worth of proven oil reserves (at current usage rates), but 60 years’ worth of gas reserves, and the latter number rises daily. We have 130 years’ worth of coal reserves, but burning coal to make electricity is increasingly ruining our climate. Burning a ton of coal generates 4-5 tons of carbon dioxide. Natural gas generates half that, for the same heat equivalent.
Huge amounts of oil and natural gas are trapped in shale – rock in which oil and gas are trapped. Anew way to extract oil and gas from shale called “fracking” is now feasible and widely used, especially in America. By this method, small explosions create fractures in the shale, into which oil and gas seep and are then pumped to the surface. America has large oil and gas shale deposits. In the long run, America’s dependence on oil will diminish as “fracking” boosts both gas and oil production and gas provides 40 percent of America’s energy needs, compared with 20 percent today.
Israel too has shale oil deposits in the Negev. But more immediately, the Tamar gas field is 90 km (54 mi) offshore, in the Mediterranean, and three miles deep, and its gas will reach Haifa in 2013. Leviathan is 130 km (78 mi) offshore. It will take longer to develop.
Piping the gas onshore from both fields will cost billions of dollars. Long before this is done, Israel must plan strategically how to exploit optimally its gas resources. Here are some options.
LNG (Liquid Natural Gas): Israel can act like Algeria, Trinidad and Qatar and build plants that cool the gas to minus 260 degrees F, liquefy it to 1/600th of its volume and ship it abroad in special LNG ships. I asked Prof. Yehuda Hayut, former Haifa University president and an expert on shipping, whether LNG is safe in a terrorridden Mideast.
“LNG is a viable and very efficient way to transport gas,” he answered. “LNG ships ply many trade routes from the Middle East and North Africa to the U.S. and Europe.
There are special safety measures when these vessels enter a port and the record is very safe.” In 50 years of LNG use, no accidents have been recorded. Constructing an LNG plant and building or leasing LNG ships takes enormous resources. And it is still raw gas that is being sold. LNG’s price is less than the crude-oil energy equivalent.
GTL (Gas to Liquid): Qatar has gas reserves larger than Leviathan. It is also a benchmark leader in gas-based industry and technology. Qatar has a revenue-sharing deal with global oil giant Royal Dutch Shell to produce 140,000 barrels a day of clean diesel, and 120,000 barrels of gas condensate, from offshore natural gas. Israel should seek a similar deal, or build a GTL plant on its own. The Qatar process is said to be secret, based on cobalt catalysts. Israel’s creative chemical engineers should be set to work at once to develop our own version.
Strategically, an Israel self-sufficient in gasoline and diesel fuel is a powerful advantage in the unstable Mideast. With gasoline now priced at 7.39 shekels per liter (or $8.15 a gallon), there is no time to waste.
CNG (Compressed Natural Gas): Bottled compressed natural gas can run cars and trucks, in place of gasoline. This could reduce Israel’s crude oil imports sharply.
Petrochemical Industry: Natural gas can become the basis of an expanded profitable petrochemical industry, producing fertilizers and plastics, for example. Such industry already exists in Haifa. Some experts think the gas can be piped to this existing site, where new plants can be built.
Haifa residents recall, however, that a Katyusha rocket hit the refineries in 2006, in Lebanon War II. Others think the gas should be piped to a new, safer petrochemical site in the Negev, far from population centers.
At present there is global overcapacity in petrochemicals and prices are low. Again, creative ideas are needed to add value to raw natural gas, through technology, in ways other countries find hard to imitate.
A Neaman Institute report shows that Israel has 400 chemical plants, generating about a third of all industrial production and exports and employing 30,000 workers.
There is also a strong supply of chemical engineers. Yet only 4 percent of the Chief Scientist’s R&D grants for innovation go to this industry, compared with over a third for communications. This imbalance must be repaired. Sharon Kedmi, Director General of the Ministry of Industry, told me his ministry is actively studying so-called “Newtech” projects, including how best to use natural gas in industry. Both the Finance and Industry Ministries must plan carefully to avoid “Dutch disease” – the Netherlands’ currency appreciated when huge gas reserves were discovered, ruining its industrial exports.
Almost everything in the Mideast becomes a political dispute. Gas is no exception. There are conflicting claims over rights to the offshore gas. Lebanon claims Israel is stealing its gas. So does Gaza.
Wisely, Israel signed an agreement with Cyprus last December, clearly delineating the sea border between the two nations.
Cyprus stands to benefit a lot from Leviathan, because part of the gas field belongs to it. Hopefully Israel and Cyprus will collaborate to develop the field. Turkey strongly protests, claiming the Greek Cypriots are scalping the rights of Turkish Cypriots. And in the background lurks the shaky supply of Egyptian gas to Israel, halted by a saboteur’s bomb, and recently threatened again by a bomb that luckily failed to explode. Though the flow of Egyptian gas to Israel has resumed, it is unclear whether Egyptian gas will continue to flow unhindered, in the wake of the deposing of President Hosni Mubarak. Any delay in developing Tamar and Leviathan will thus be dangerous.
Perhaps the only loser in this story is Langotsky. He had to drop a limited partnership formed to finance exploration, when his partner, mining tycoon Benny Steinmetz, bailed out, only two months before exploratory drilling began. Langotsky will ironically not profit at all from the gas wealth he was instrumental in generating. • The writer is senior research fellow, at the S. Neaman Institute, Technion.
Israeli Energy Independence
ReplyDeleteTom Roberson
In an ironic twist of fate, Israel is about to become a major Middle East energy producer through the discovery of one of the world's largest offshore natural gas fields, with serious implications for regional realignment and stability.
Houston-based Noble Energy confirmed the discovery of an estimated 16 trillion cubic feet of natural gas deposits in its Leviathan offshore field, enough energy to power Israel for 100 years. The Leviathan field is part of the Levant Basin Province, estimated by the US Geological Survey to contain approximately 120 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas reserves equivalent to 20 billion barrels of oil. While far short of Saudi Arabia's proven reserves of 262 billion barrels of oil, it nevertheless holds the possibility of freeing Israel from dependence on the oil market, influenced by its Arab neighbors for energy.
Israel will now be able to achieve what we in America have longed for since the 1970s, an end to dependence on foreign oil. Imagine the regional realignment possibilities conceivable by an Israel no longer dependent on hostile neighbors for oil. I don't imagine this news was well received by her neighbors in the oil business as they will now lose a significant bargaining chip in regional relations.
The discovery in America of significant recoverable gas reserves in shale formations such as the Barnett shale in Texas, the Haynesville shale in Louisiana, and the Marcellus shale in Pennsylvania, along with the Eagle Ford shale in South Texas, hold the same promise for America. However, environmentalists are working to shut down gas production in these areas due to their opposition to the hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, process used in horizontal shale drilling.
Environmentalists never seem to be satisfied as they oppose ANWR drilling, offshore drilling, nuclear energy, and, basically, any energy production at all in a vain attempt to return us to the pristine conditions of the Stone Age.
I hope that Israel will not allow similar distractions to derail its ability to free itself from dependence on often hostile neighbors for its energy needs.
Tom Roberson is an independent conservative blogging at www.tomroberson.wordpress.com and doing his small part to save his country. He'd love to hear from you.
About Hydraulic Fracturing
ReplyDeleteHydraulic fracturing is a proven technological advancement which allows producers to safely recover natural gas and oil from deep shale formations. This technology has the potential to not only dramatically reduce our reliance on foreign fuel imports, but also to significantly reduce our national carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and accelerate our transition to a carbon-light environment. Simply put, deep shale gas and oil formation development is critical to America's energy needs and economic renewal.
News
Independent Report on Atgas Incident Finds No Impact on Local Water Wells
Israel could become oil and gas powerhouse if its regulators would let it
ReplyDeleteTamar drilling natural gas production platform is seen some 25 kilometers West of the Ashkelon shore
Photo by Handout/Getty Images
Israel and their supporters used to bemoan the fact that the Jewish state is the one area in the Middle East that lacked oil and gas resources. That fact began to change thanks to the discovery of natural gas deposits in the Mediterranean just offshore of the Jewish state. Now, according to a Friday story in Real Clear Energy, Israel may have struck oil in the Golan Heights, a region that it captured from Syria during the Six-Day War. Israel is on its way to becoming the next Middle East oil and gas exporting country.
The effects on Israel’s standing in the Middle East are likely to be profound. Israel has already signed a natural gas deal with its neighbor Jordan, another resource-poor Middle Eastern country that had made peace with the Jewish state some years ago, Jordan finds itself beset because of the current chaos in Syria, overrun with refugees, and with its military the tip of the spear in the fight against ISIS. Israel also dreams of providing natural gas to Europe, which is scrambling to wean itself from Russian sources.
Some have suggested that it is improper for Israel to exploit resources in what is occupied territory. But Syria’s continued existence as a viable state is questionable at best. Besides, when Israel occupied the Sinai, it pumped oil out of that region as well. When Israel concluded peace with Egypt and returned the Sinai, it also returned producing oil wells to its neighbor and former enemy.
The one stumbling block for Israel becoming an oil and gas exporting country may be the country’s regulators. Foreign Policy suggests that anti-trust laws have delayed the start of the development of the Tamar and Leviathan gas fields in the Mediterranean. The regulators believe that there are too few companies developing Israel’s gas resources, setting up the specter of a cartel. The matter needs sorting out, for otherwise the dream of Israel as an energy independent country may recede further into the future much to the detriment of the economic viability of the Jewish state.
ISRAEL ON THE CUSP OF AN ENERGY REVOLUTION
ReplyDeleteBy Jeff Share, Editor | January 2014, Vol. 241 No. 1
Israel is facing a quandary these days, one that nearly every country in the world wishes it had.
After many years of dreaming of having control of its own natural resources and being energy-independent, Israel now finds itself awash in natural gas reserves with the best yet to come. There are reports that Israel possesses the second-largest deposits of oil shale in the world outside of the United States. Underneath the ground near Jerusalem, into the southern part of Israel in the Negev desert there lies an estimated 400 billion tons of oil shale that contains reserves of unconventional oil which is more than even Saudi Arabia.
So perhaps some 3,500 years ago when Moses led his people out of Egypt and through the desert he had a grand plan in mind, albeit one that would not take shape until now: manna from heaven in the form of fossil fuels that could create the world’s newest energy powerhouse. But before this is realized, a myriad of issues must be confronted: economic, environmental and political.
ISRAEL ON THE CUSP OF AN ENERGY REVOLUTION
ReplyDeleteBy Jeff Share, Editor | January 2014, Vol. 241 No. 1
Israel is facing a quandary these days, one that nearly every country in the world wishes it had.
After many years of dreaming of having control of its own natural resources and being energy-independent, Israel now finds itself awash in natural gas reserves with the best yet to come. There are reports that Israel possesses the second-largest deposits of oil shale in the world outside of the United States. Underneath the ground near Jerusalem, into the southern part of Israel in the Negev desert there lies an estimated 400 billion tons of oil shale that contains reserves of unconventional oil which is more than even Saudi Arabia.
So perhaps some 3,500 years ago when Moses led his people out of Egypt and through the desert he had a grand plan in mind, albeit one that would not take shape until now: manna from heaven in the form of fossil fuels that could create the world’s newest energy powerhouse. But before this is realized, a myriad of issues must be confronted: economic, environmental and political.
Israel could become oil and gas powerhouse if its regulators would let it
ReplyDeleteTamar drilling natural gas production platform is seen some 25 kilometers West of the Ashkelon shore
Photo by Handout/Getty Images
Israel and their supporters used to bemoan the fact that the Jewish state is the one area in the Middle East that lacked oil and gas resources. That fact began to change thanks to the discovery of natural gas deposits in the Mediterranean just offshore of the Jewish state. Now, according to a Friday story in Real Clear Energy, Israel may have struck oil in the Golan Heights, a region that it captured from Syria during the Six-Day War. Israel is on its way to becoming the next Middle East oil and gas exporting country.
The effects on Israel’s standing in the Middle East are likely to be profound. Israel has already signed a natural gas deal with its neighbor Jordan, another resource-poor Middle Eastern country that had made peace with the Jewish state some years ago, Jordan finds itself beset because of the current chaos in Syria, overrun with refugees, and with its military the tip of the spear in the fight against ISIS. Israel also dreams of providing natural gas to Europe, which is scrambling to wean itself from Russian sources.
Some have suggested that it is improper for Israel to exploit resources in what is occupied territory. But Syria’s continued existence as a viable state is questionable at best. Besides, when Israel occupied the Sinai, it pumped oil out of that region as well. When Israel concluded peace with Egypt and returned the Sinai, it also returned producing oil wells to its neighbor and former enemy.
The one stumbling block for Israel becoming an oil and gas exporting country may be the country’s regulators. Foreign Policy suggests that anti-trust laws have delayed the start of the development of the Tamar and Leviathan gas fields in the Mediterranean. The regulators believe that there are too few companies developing Israel’s gas resources, setting up the specter of a cartel. The matter needs sorting out, for otherwise the dream of Israel as an energy independent country may recede further into the future much to the detriment of the economic viability of the Jewish state.
It is interesting to note, that Jordan is a country that never existed in history before WWI and nobody is contesting its legitimacy or territorial sovereignty and control. The same powers that established 21 Arab States plus Jordan after WWI, established the State of Israel based on the Balfour Declaration and the San Remo Treaty of 1920.
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, Israel and its Jewish people have over 4,000 years of history.
Many nations and people are questioning Israel’s control of its liberated territory. No one is mentioning that the Arab countries had persecuted and ejected about a million Jewish families and their children from their countries, confiscated their assets, businesses, homes and Real estate 650,00 Jewish people and their children of these expelled Jewish people were resettled in Greater Israel. The Land the Arab countries confiscated from the Jewish people 120,400 sq. km. or 75,000 sq. miles, which is over 5-6 times the size of Israel, and its value today is the trillions of dollars.
Let the 21 Arab countries resettle the Arab Palestinians in the land they confiscated from the Jews which is 4 times the size of Israel. Provide them with funds they confiscated from the million Jewish people they expelled and let them build an economy, This will benefit both the Arab-Palestinians and the hosting countries, The other alternative is relocate the Arab-Palestinians to Jordan, (originally land allocated for the Jewish people) which is already 80% Arab-Palestinians, and give them funds to relocate and build an economy. This will solve the Arab-Palestinians refugee problem once and for all. It will also reduce hostility and strife in the region.
If this is not discrimination against Israel, I do not know what is.
It seems like nobody cares about land violations in other countries in the world, but when it comes to Israel, everyone has a say. Israel’s rights in the terms of the treaty of San Remo of 1920 are in affect in perpetuity. It clearly states that the Jewish people are the only ones with political rights in the British Mandate of Palestine and that the Jewish people can live anywhere in the British Mandate.
If the U.S., Europe and other countries will stop meddling, and stop its criticism and involvement in the politics of Israel and the Arabs, than there will be a chance for peace.
We know the great powers are only interested in the OIL and nothing else, that is the bottom line.
A true and lasting peace in Israel will bring mammoth economic prosperity to The Israelis and The Arabs alike.
An approach to peace starts by teaching the Arab-Palestinian children and the people not to hate and condemn any acts of violence that hurts civilian populations and stop celebrating and rewarding the death and destruction of each other.
http://www.cfr.org/israel/san-remo-resolution/p15248
http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/insideisrael/2010/July/San-Remo-Resolution-Revisited/
YJ Draiman
P.S.
ReplyDeleteNo Jew has the right to yield the rights of the Jewish People in Israel –.
David Ben Gurion.
(David Ben-Gurion was the first Prime Minister of Israel and widely hailed as the State’s main founder).
“No Jew is entitled to give up the right of establishing [i.e. settling] the Jewish Nation in all of the Land of Israel. No Jewish body has such power. Not even all the Jews alive today [i.e. the entire Jewish People] have the power to cede any part of the country or homeland whatsoever. This is a right vouchsafed or reserved for the Jewish Nation throughout all generations. This right cannot be lost or expropriated under any condition or circumstance. Even if at some particular time, there are those who declare that they are relinquishing this right, they have no power nor competence to deprive coming generations of this right. The Jewish nation is neither bound nor governed by such a waiver or renunciation. Our right to the whole of this country is valid, in force and endures forever. And until the Final Redemption has come, we will not budge from this historic right.”.
BEN-GURION’S DECLARATION ON THE EXCLUSIVE AND.
INALIENABLE JEWISH RIGHT TO THE WHOLE OF.
THE LAND OF ISRAEL:
at the Basle Session of the 20th Zionist Congress at Zurich (1937).
Like most democracies but only more so, Israel’s political system is a confusing and often frustrating mess. So when the country began to develop the enormous reserves of offshore natural gas in recent years, the only impediment to the nation becoming an unlikely energy giant came from within, not from without. The legacy of the socialist economics practiced by it’s Labor Party founders and the cumbersome bureaucracy they created that existed more to regulate and retard development rather than speed stands as an ever-present threat to its ability to remain the world’s Start-Up Nation. The only obstacle to Israel successfully exploiting the seemingly miraculous discovery of vast reserves of gas within its grasp was always the government itself. Unfortunately, that fear was realized last December when an anti-trust regulator ruled that the Noble Energy and its Israeli partners, the Delek Group, were acting as a monopoly, putting an effective freeze on development of the Tamar and Leviathan fields. But after six months of inaction and negotiation, the Netanyahu government has invoked a never-before-used legal clause that allows the Security Cabinet to override an anti-trust commissioner by reason of national security. The result is that Israel’s progress towards becoming a major player in the energy field is back on track.
ReplyDeleteNo Jew has the right to yield the rights of the Jewish People in Israel –.
ReplyDeleteDavid Ben Gurion.
(David Ben-Gurion was the first Prime Minister of Israel and widely hailed as the State’s main founder).
“No Jew is entitled to give up the right of establishing [i.e. settling] the Jewish Nation in all of the Land of Israel. No Jewish body has such power. Not even all the Jews alive today [i.e. the entire Jewish People] have the power to cede any part of the country or homeland whatsoever. This is a right vouchsafed or reserved for the Jewish Nation throughout all generations. This right cannot be lost or expropriated under any condition or circumstance. Even if at some particular time, there are those who declare that they are relinquishing this right, they have no power nor competence to deprive coming generations of this right. The Jewish nation is neither bound nor governed by such a waiver or renunciation. Our right to the whole of this country is valid, in force and endures forever. And until the Final Redemption has come, we will not budge from this historic right.”.
BEN-GURION’S DECLARATION ON THE EXCLUSIVE AND.
INALIENABLE JEWISH RIGHT TO THE WHOLE OF.
THE LAND OF ISRAEL:
at the Basle Session of the 20th Zionist Congress at Zurich (1937).
No Jew has the right to yield the rights of the Jewish People in Israel –.
ReplyDeleteDavid Ben Gurion.
(David Ben-Gurion was the first Prime Minister of Israel and widely hailed as the State’s main founder).
“No Jew is entitled to give up the right of establishing [i.e. settling] the Jewish Nation in all of the Land of Israel. No Jewish body has such power. Not even all the Jews alive today [i.e. the entire Jewish People] have the power to cede any part of the country or homeland whatsoever. This is a right vouchsafed or reserved for the Jewish Nation throughout all generations. This right cannot be lost or expropriated under any condition or circumstance. Even if at some particular time, there are those who declare that they are relinquishing this right, they have no power nor competence to deprive coming generations of this right. The Jewish nation is neither bound nor governed by such a waiver or renunciation. Our right to the whole of this country is valid, in force and endures forever. And until the Final Redemption has come, we will not budge from this historic right.”.
BEN-GURION’S DECLARATION ON THE EXCLUSIVE AND.
INALIENABLE JEWISH RIGHT TO THE WHOLE OF.
THE LAND OF ISRAEL:
at the Basle Session of the 20th Zionist Congress at Zurich (1937).
Like most democracies but only more so, Israel’s political system is a confusing and often frustrating mess. So when the country began to develop the enormous reserves of offshore natural gas in recent years, the only impediment to the nation becoming an unlikely energy giant came from within, not from without. The legacy of the socialist economics practiced by it’s Labor Party founders and the cumbersome bureaucracy they created that existed more to regulate and retard development rather than speed stands as an ever-present threat to its ability to remain the world’s Start-Up Nation. The only obstacle to Israel successfully exploiting the seemingly miraculous discovery of vast reserves of gas within its grasp was always the government itself. Unfortunately, that fear was realized last December when an anti-trust regulator ruled that the Noble Energy and its Israeli partners, the Delek Group, were acting as a monopoly, putting an effective freeze on development of the Tamar and Leviathan fields. But after six months of inaction and negotiation, the Netanyahu government has invoked a never-before-used legal clause that allows the Security Cabinet to override an anti-trust commissioner by reason of national security. The result is that Israel’s progress towards becoming a major player in the energy field is back on track.
ReplyDeleteP.S.
ReplyDeleteNo Jew has the right to yield the rights of the Jewish People in Israel –.
David Ben Gurion.
(David Ben-Gurion was the first Prime Minister of Israel and widely hailed as the State’s main founder).
“No Jew is entitled to give up the right of establishing [i.e. settling] the Jewish Nation in all of the Land of Israel. No Jewish body has such power. Not even all the Jews alive today [i.e. the entire Jewish People] have the power to cede any part of the country or homeland whatsoever. This is a right vouchsafed or reserved for the Jewish Nation throughout all generations. This right cannot be lost or expropriated under any condition or circumstance. Even if at some particular time, there are those who declare that they are relinquishing this right, they have no power nor competence to deprive coming generations of this right. The Jewish nation is neither bound nor governed by such a waiver or renunciation. Our right to the whole of this country is valid, in force and endures forever. And until the Final Redemption has come, we will not budge from this historic right.”.
BEN-GURION’S DECLARATION ON THE EXCLUSIVE AND.
INALIENABLE JEWISH RIGHT TO THE WHOLE OF.
THE LAND OF ISRAEL:
at the Basle Session of the 20th Zionist Congress at Zurich (1937).
It is interesting to note, that Jordan is a country that never existed in history before WWI and nobody is contesting its legitimacy or territorial sovereignty and control. The same powers that established 21 Arab States plus Jordan after WWI, established the State of Israel based on the Balfour Declaration and the San Remo Treaty of 1920.
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, Israel and its Jewish people have over 4,000 years of history.
Many nations and people are questioning Israel’s control of its liberated territory. No one is mentioning that the Arab countries had persecuted and ejected about a million Jewish families and their children from their countries, confiscated their assets, businesses, homes and Real estate 650,00 Jewish people and their children of these expelled Jewish people were resettled in Greater Israel. The Land the Arab countries confiscated from the Jewish people 120,400 sq. km. or 75,000 sq. miles, which is over 5-6 times the size of Israel, and its value today is the trillions of dollars.
Let the 21 Arab countries resettle the Arab Palestinians in the land they confiscated from the Jews which is 4 times the size of Israel. Provide them with funds they confiscated from the million Jewish people they expelled and let them build an economy, This will benefit both the Arab-Palestinians and the hosting countries, The other alternative is relocate the Arab-Palestinians to Jordan, (originally land allocated for the Jewish people) which is already 80% Arab-Palestinians, and give them funds to relocate and build an economy. This will solve the Arab-Palestinians refugee problem once and for all. It will also reduce hostility and strife in the region.
If this is not discrimination against Israel, I do not know what is.
It seems like nobody cares about land violations in other countries in the world, but when it comes to Israel, everyone has a say. Israel’s rights in the terms of the treaty of San Remo of 1920 are in affect in perpetuity. It clearly states that the Jewish people are the only ones with political rights in the British Mandate of Palestine and that the Jewish people can live anywhere in the British Mandate.
If the U.S., Europe and other countries will stop meddling, and stop its criticism and involvement in the politics of Israel and the Arabs, than there will be a chance for peace.
We know the great powers are only interested in the OIL and nothing else, that is the bottom line.
A true and lasting peace in Israel will bring mammoth economic prosperity to The Israelis and The Arabs alike.
An approach to peace starts by teaching the Arab-Palestinian children and the people not to hate and condemn any acts of violence that hurts civilian populations and stop celebrating and rewarding the death and destruction of each other.
http://www.cfr.org/israel/san-remo-resolution/p15248
http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/insideisrael/2010/July/San-Remo-Resolution-Revisited/
YJ Draiman
This was very detailed article on gas reserves in Israel. I really enjoyed reading this post "Israel - The Natural Gas Solution" Thanks
ReplyDelete