City
Epaper

Israel, Greece increase energy cooperation

By ANI | Updated: January 26, 2024 13:25 IST

Tel Aviv [Israel], January 26 (ANI/TPS): Israel's Minister of Energy and Infrastructure Eli Cohen spoke with the Minister of ...

Open in App

Tel Aviv [Israel], January 26 (ANI/TPS): Israel's Minister of Energy and Infrastructure Eli Cohen spoke with the Minister of the Environment and Energy of Greece, Theodoros Skylakakis.

During the conversation, they agreed on increasing cooperation in projects shared by both countries, among other things in the underwater electric cable that will connect Israel to Cyprus and from there to Greece and the Israel-Europe natural gas pipeline project.

In addition, they agreed that during the next few weeks Skylakakis will visit Israel, during which he will sign an agreement in the energy fields discussed in the conversation.

Minister Cohen: "We are connecting Israel to Europe through Greece, diversifying Europe's energy sources in the midst of the energy crisis and strengthening Israel's position in the region." (ANI/TPS)

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyNon-IT sectors emerge as primary drivers of hiring in India in 2025

TechnologyWHO, Ayush Ministry holds meeting to foster global integration of traditional medicine

HealthWHO, Ayush Ministry holds meeting to foster global integration of traditional medicine

BusinessNon-IT sectors emerge as primary drivers of hiring in India in 2025

BusinessStock market closes on positive note, Sensex gains 638 pts

International Realted Stories

InternationalNearly 4,000 Afghan refugees deported from Iran, Pakistan in single day

InternationalASEAN, Cambodia discuss peaceful settlement of disputes through dialogue

InternationalBangladesh burns: Another student leader faces murderous attack

InternationalBangladesh minorities protest 'persecution, silence' under Yunus-led interim rule

InternationalResearch in Australia offers hope for preventing stillbirth through early detection