By Timour Azhari
DAMASCUS (Reuters) -U.S.-based firms Baker Hughes, Hunt Energy and Argent LNG will develop a masterplan for Syria’s oil, gas and power sector, Argent LNG CEO Jonathan Bass said on Friday, in a partnership aimed at rebuilding energy infrastructure shattered by 14 years of civil war.
The move marks a swift turnaround as U.S. companies enter a country previously under one of the world’s tightest sanctions regimes that U.S. President Donald Trump lifted at the end of June.
The companies plan to help explore and extract oil and gas and produce power to help get the economy running as the government seeks to put Syria back on the map. The plan comes after a dash by other companies, many from Gulf Arab states, to sign deals to bolster Syria’s power generation and ports infrastructure.
Details of the plan have not been previously reported.
“We are initiating the development of a comprehensive masterplan for energy and power generation in Syria, based on a preliminary assessment of opportunities for near-term improvements in generation capacity and service delivery,” Bass told Reuters via phone.
“Our efforts aim to support the revitalization of the energy sector in coordination with relevant stakeholders,” he added.
“This includes potential activities across the value chain—from exploration and production to electricity generation, including combined-cycle power plants,” he said, declining to elaborate further.
Argent LNG, which is developing a liquefied natural gas export facility in Louisiana, in January signed a non-binding agreement to supply Bangladesh up to 5 million metric tons of the fuel annually, the first major U.S. LNG supply deal since Trump began his second term.
Reuters received no immediate response to emailed questions to global energy services provider Baker Hughes and Texas-based electric utility Hunt Energy.
The plan is to begin with areas west of the Euphrates River, under control of the Syrian government.
Syria’s east, where much of its oil is produced, remains controlled by the Syrian Democratic Forces, a U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led armed group that Washington has urged to integrate with the new authorities in Damascus following the ouster of former Syrian strongman Bashar al-Assad.
After 14 years of war, Syria’s electricity sector is severely damaged, generating only 1.6 gigawatts of electricity, down from 9.5 GW before 2011. Billions of dollars of investment are needed to fix the sector, so the cash-strapped state is looking at private investment or donors to foot the bill.