As widely reported, Shell has been in talks to buy gas from Israel’s Leviathan field and Cyrpus’ Aphrodite field. It is understood that Shell are looking to contract up to 10bcm p.a. for 10 years in a deal worth up to USD25 billion.
Shell would use the gas to properly restart LNG exports from Egyptian LNG at the Idku liquefaction plant. BG Group was the operator of the plant prior to its acquisition by Shell and previously had a non-binding 15 year deal to source gas from Leviathan – this deal stalled amid the takeover by Shell and regulatory hurdles in Israel.
Leviathan is owned by Delek Drilling (45.34%), Noble Energy (39.66% operator) and Ratio Oil Exploration (15%). The field is on track to target first gas by end 2019.
Aphrodite is owned by Noble (35% operator), Delek Drilling (30%) and Shell (35%). Aphrodite lies in Block 12, offshore Cyprus and was discovered in 2011. BG Group farmed into 35% of the field from Noble Energy in November 2015 for USD165 million. Its commercialisation was previously called into question given the resource was too small to justify export infrastructure to mainland Europe or Egypt. However with the recent Calypso discovery in Block 6, which operator Eni has dubbed as a “Zohr like” play, Cypriot gas could finally take off.