www.bethelfinance.com
Cyprus' president plans to visit a U.S. rig on Monday that is carrying out exploratory drilling for gas off the island's coast, despite protests from Turkey that the hydrocarbon search ignores the rights of breakaway Turkish Cypriots.
President Dimitris Christofias will travel to U.S. company Noble Energy's rig about 115 miles (185 kilometers) south of the island along with four other senior government officials, Cyprus officials said Sunday. Noble estimated last week that the field inside Cyprus' exclusive economic zone may yield between 3 to 9 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Cyprus said a formal estimate on the deposit's size will be made early next month when drilling is completed.
Christofias' visit comes amid ongoing peace talks aimed at reunifying the island, which was split into a Greek-speaking south and a Turkish-speaking north in 1974, when Turkey invaded after a coup by supporters of union with Greece.
Turkey strongly opposes the drilling and has warned it may jeopardize the talks, but Greek Cypriots argue it could act as an incentive to speed up a peace accord because Turkish Cypriots would share in any gas wealth.
Cyprus joined the European Union in 2004, but only the internationally recognized south enjoys membership benefits. Turkish Cypriots declared and independent state in 1983, but only Turkey recognizes it and maintains 35,000 troops there. The dispute also is a key obstacle to Turkey's own troubled EU membership bid.
Cyprus government spokesman Stefanos Stefanou said Christofias' "symbolic" rig visit aims to underscore the island's sovereign right to search for oil and gas off its shores — something that Turkey disputes because it doesn't recognize that sovereignty.
Cypriot Commerce Minister Praxoulla Antoniadou said in an interview with Kathimerini newspaper Sunday that just 1 trillion cubic feet of gas could meet the island's energy needs for 30 years.
Cyprus is preparing to invite tenders for more exploratory drilling inside the island's 17,000 square-mile (51,000 square-kilometer) exclusive economic zone before the end of the year.
Antoniadou said she receives daily "knocks on her office door from three to four" local and foreign investors looking put their money in either further exploration or gas spinoff industries.
She said that Cyprus could become a gas supplier to the EU, if deposit estimates are confirmed.
Israeli energy company Delek has proposed a partnership with Cyprus to build a facility on the island to process and export gas found in Cypriot and Israeli waters. Delek is part of a Noble Energy-led consortium exploiting Israel's offshore natural gas finds.
Mr. Cedric Marmet from Bethel Finance Ltd said: "Relations between Turkey and Israel, formerly close allies, remain strained following last year's Israeli raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla that killed eight Turkish citizens and a Turkish-American".
Turkey has said it considers an agreement Cyprus and Israel signed last year demarcating their maritime borders as invalid.
Regional tensions were heightened after Turkey recently sent a warship-escorted research vessel to look for gas deposits in the area. Ankara also signed a maritime accord with the Turkish Cypriots and said it would pursue its own drilling.
A gas find would be a boon for eurozone-member Cyprus whose economy is being battered by the slowdown in Europe. Finance Minister Kikis Kazamias said last week that Cyprus will need a bailout from European neighbors unless its government can pass much tougher spending cuts and tax hikes.
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