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Israel negotiates oil purchase with Azerbaijan

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  • Israel negotiates oil purchase with Azerbaijan

    Israel negotiates oil purchase with Azerbaijan
    By Leah Krauss
    UPI Energy Correspondent
    Published June 6, 2006


    BAKU, Azerbaijan -- Israeli Minister of National Infrastructures Benjamin
    Ben-Eliezer and Rovnag Abdullayev, the president of the Azerbaijani state
    oil company SOCAR, set oil purchase negotiations in motion on Tuesday during
    Ben-Eliezer's visit to the Caspian country.

    "I'm here to open business with you," Ben-Eliezer told Abdullayev.


    Israel buys one-sixth of its oil from Azerbaijan, but from a consortium
    rather than directly from SOCAR, according to the chairman of Israel's Oil
    Refineries Ltd., Ohad Marani.

    Abdullayev and Ben-Eliezer discussed starting talks on a deal under
    which Israel would buy Azerbaijani oil for its two oil refineries and for
    transportation to the Far East via the Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline to the Red
    Sea.

    Azerbaijani oil arrives at the Turkish Mediterranean Sea port of Ceyhan
    via the recently inaugurated 1,058-mile Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Pipeline, the
    second-longest oil and gas pipeline in the world.

    Ceyhan is roughly 373 miles north of the Israeli port city of Ashkelon.

    The Eliat-Ashkelon Pipeline represents an opportunity for Israel to
    become a major oil and gas corridor. Israeli energy industry insiders said
    other transport options such as passage through the Suez Canal or shipping
    around the entire African continent are much more expensive routes than the
    Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline.

    The energy businessmen said India was likely a key market for
    Azerbaijani oil and gas.

    Oil from this Caspian Sea country is light, good for high-octane
    gasoline, Mordechay Shalev, Eilat Ashkelon Pipeline Co. deputy general
    manager, told United Press International.

    Ben-Eliezer urged Abdullayev to visit Israel and tour the pipeline.

    In previous discussions of establishing an energy corridor in Israel,
    the idea of extending the BTC pipeline underwater from Ceyhan to the Israeli
    port cities of Haifa and Ashkelon.

    But transporting the oil between the two pipelines via tankers may be a
    more cost-effective scenario, Israel's ambassador to Azerbaijan, Arthur
    Lenk, told UPI.

    At the meeting in SOCAR's Baku offices, Shalev briefed Abdullayev on the
    Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline's capabilities, and Oil Refineries Ltd.'s Marani
    spoke of looking forward to cooperation between the two countries.

    The Israeli delegation seemed optimistic about a possible oil deal,
    though Ben-Eliezer said just two days ago that the country should use less
    oil.

    "The Ministry of National Infrastructures is working to reduce the State
    of Israel's dependency on oil," he said via a ministry statement announcing
    that the country had spent nearly $6 billion on oil in 2005.

    "It is my intention as national infrastructures minister to promote ...
    energy conservation, renewable energy and the use of alternative fuels,"
    Ben-Eliezer continued, according to the statement.

    Israel has been courting international energy companies aggressively
    over the past several months in efforts to increase competition in the
    concentrated market.

    Talks with Russian giant Gazprom are going well, according to advisers
    to Ben-Eliezer, while talks with British company BG Group broke down over
    prices.

    The country imports all of its oil and has only one natural gas
    supplier, the jointly held Israeli and American company Yam Tethys.
    Israel-Egyptian company East Mediterranean Gas is set to enter the Israeli
    market in late 2007.

    But because Yam Tethys has already promised away most of its reserves,
    any potential new customers, such as private power stations looking to
    compete with the state-run Israel Electric Corp., would only be able to buy
    from EMG.

    Earlier Tuesday, Ben-Eliezer met for nearly an hour with Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev. Speaking in front of reporters at the beginning of
    the meeting, Aliyev told Ben-Eliezer that a partnership of Israel should not
    be strictly about energy; rather, Azerbaijan could also benefit from Israeli
    high-tech, infrastructure and medical services.

    Later, as the two met privately with their advisers, Ben-Eliezer
    expressed hope that Azerbaijan would soon set up an embassy in Israel,
    according to those present at the meeting.

    "It was an excellent meeting," Ben-Eliezer told UPI afterward.

    On Wednesday, Ben-Eliezer plans to meet with Azerbaijan's energy
    minister.
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