Saboteurs bombed an Egyptian gas pipeline in the Sinai peninsula yesterday, sending flames shooting into the sky and cutting supplies to Israel and Jordan, a security official said.
Officials said a car had parked near the pipeline in the Bir al-Abd area, 80km from the northern Sinai town of El-Arish, shortly before the explosion.
They said the bomb was activated remotely.
Emergency services were deployed to the area to try to bring the fire under control, an official said.
Witnesses said the flames reached as high as 10m. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
It was the third attack on the gas pipeline since February, when an uprising toppled former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak and saw power handed over to a military council.
On April 27, the pipeline in al-Sabil area of north Sinai was also attacked, cutting off international gas supplies. In February, attackers used explosives against the pipeline in the town of Lihfren in north Sinai, near the Gaza Strip.
There was also a failed attempt to attack the pipeline in March.
Jordan, which buys 95 percent of its energy needs, imports about 6.8 million cubic meters of Egyptian gas a day, or 80 percent of its electricity requirements.
Jordanian officials have been in talks with their Egyptian counterparts “to determine the damage and discuss solutions,” Jordan’s state-run Petra news agency said.
“Jordan will face unusual problems this summer if this issue continues,” Abdul Fattah Nsur, director of Jordan Central Electricity Generation Company, told Petra.
Egypt also supplies about 40 percent of Israel’s natural gas, which is used to produce electricity. In December, four Israeli firms signed 20-year contracts worth up to US$10 billion to import Egyptian gas.
In April, Egyptian Prime Minister Essam Sharaf asked for the revision of all contracts to supply gas abroad, including to Israel.
Sharaf said the contracts would be revisited so the gas “would be sold with deserved prices that achieve the highest returns for Egypt.”
The controversial gas deal with Israel has been repeatedly challenged in Egyptian courts on the grounds of its secretive clauses and because it was sealed without parliamentary consultation.
A court imposed an injunction on the deal, in a move ignored by Mubarak’s government. A higher court overturned the freeze last year, on condition the government regulate the quantity and price of gas exported.
Israel’s government viewed the ouster of Mubarak with alarm.
Egypt was the first Arab country to sign a peace deal with the Jewish state in 1979, but the public has remained hostile toward Israel over its policies in the occupied Palestinian territories.
After the military took power following Mubarak’s ouster, it pledged that it would respect the 1979 peace treaty with Israel.
In May, Jordan said Egypt was withholding its contracted gas supply to energy-poor Jordan unless a new deal was signed at a higher price.
Under a 14-year deal signed in 2002, Egypt used to sell gas to Jordan at a discounted price — half of the market price, or US$3 per million British Thermal Units.
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