By currahee_shutter @Adobe Stock

The US Energy Information Administration reports that in August 2025, Egyptโ€™s Blue Ocean Energy signed a $35 billion deal with partners in Israelโ€™s Leviathan gas field to boost imports as domestic production lags behind demand. Egyptโ€™s output from its Zohr field has declined due to operational issues, forcing greater reliance on LNG imports and new floating regasification units at Ain Sukhna and Damietta. Israel, with surplus supply from its Tamar and Leviathan fields, continues exporting via pipeline to Egypt and Jordan, though it lacks LNG export capacity. Jordan, heavily dependent on imports, added a new FSRU at Aqaba and secured LNG supplies from Egypt to strengthen energy security. They write:

In August 2025, Egyptian firm Blue Ocean Energy struck aย $35 billion dealย with partners in the Chevron-operated Leviathan field offshore of Israel to import more natural gas from Israel, the latest move by Egypt to meet natural gas demand that is outpacing domestic production. In our latest update to theย Eastern Mediterranean Energyย briefing, we discuss the drivers behind Egyptโ€™s dwindling natural gas supply and analyze the natural gas dynamics in the region.

We estimate a countryโ€™s implied natural gas balance by subtracting domestic natural gas consumption from domestic production. A positive number indicates a surplus, while a negative number indicates a shortfall in supply.

Theย discovery and fast-track development of the Zohr field, Egyptโ€™s largest offshore natural gas discovery to date,ย brought a significant boost to productionย and initially indicated thatย Egypt could become a regional exporter of natural gas. The field was discovered in 2015 and developed in 2017. However,ย operational and technical issues at the Zohr fieldย resulted in lower production,ย requiring Egypt to turn to natural gas importsย to meet domestic demand for natural gas, which has steadily increased over the past decade.

This year, Egypt is seeking to address any shortfall in natural gas supply byย ramping up import purchasesย of liquefied natural gas (LNG). It is alsoย chartering three additional floating storage regasification unitsย (FSRUs) that are scheduled to begin operations in Ain Sukhna on the Gulf of Suez and in Damietta on the Mediterranean Sea by the end of third-quarter 2025. Aย fourth FSRU, the Hรถegh Gandria, is scheduled to replace the Hรถegh Galleon, which has been operating at the Port of Sumed near Ain Sukhna, in fourth-quarter 2026.

Israel developed a substantial natural gas supply after the commercial start of its offshore natural gas discoveries in the 2010s, most notably at theย Tamarย field in 2013 and theย Leviathanย field in 2019. Israelโ€™s production surpassed its domestic consumption soon after, freeing up supply for export via pipeline to Jordan and Egypt. Israel currently lacks LNG export capacity.

Jordan runs a natural gas deficit because it produces very little natural gas and therefore relies on piped natural gas from Israel. To ensure import flexibility, Jordan secured the Energos Force FSRU, which began operating at the port of Aqaba in August 2025. The Energos Force replaces the Energos Eskimo FSRU that was operating at the port until June 2025 when it departed for Egypt after its charter expired. Jordan alsoย signed an agreement with Egyptย in December 2024 to secure LNG supplies from Egyptโ€™s FSRUs over the next two years, which will provide additional import security.

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