Nicosia got today in Cairo what it has been pursuing for years in the energy sector, a concrete political and commercial step that paves the way for Cypriot natural gas to finally come out of the paper exercises and into the market. Cyprus and Egypt signed a Framework Agreement for energy cooperation, focusing on the Kronos and Aphrodite fields, which are intended to be exploited through existing Egyptian infrastructure.
The signatures were signed after President Nicos Christodoulides met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on the sidelines of the Egypt Energy Show, ( EGYPES 2026), which is being held in Cairo from today to Wednesday. According to the Cypriot side, the two leaders confirmed the further deepening of the strategic relationship between Cyprus and Egypt, with a clear reference to the role of their cooperation as a pillar of stability in the Eastern Mediterranean.
The political message is twofold. First, that the Republic of Cyprus is choosing to move pragmatically, using existing Egyptian infrastructure, and second, that energy is becoming a tool for geopolitical convergence between two countries that have already built close cooperation in an unstable neighborhood.
The target for 2027 to 2028
Cypriot President Christodoulides had said before his departure for Egypt that the goal is the first sale of Cypriot gas to Europe via Egypt around 2027 to 2028. Today’s agreement does not mean that the gas flow will start tomorrow, but it does mean that the process has finally got a concrete corridor.
The development of the Saturn field is timed to take place between 2027 and 2028, while Aphrodite also remains central to the plan for transportation and processing in Egypt before exports to European markets.
The essence of the deal is that Cyprus is attempting to commercialise its deposits without waiting to acquire its own onshore liquefaction plants. The model being promoted is based on transporting the gas to Egypt, processing it there and then exporting it, mainly to Europe. This had already begun to take shape with previous agreements and commercial arrangements in 2025, especially for Kronos, and today’s signature comes to give new institutional and political weight to the overall architecture of the project.
The European dimension
The Cypriot side openly linked the agreement to European energy security, underlining that the Eastern Mediterranean energy corridor is becoming more important in the current geopolitical context. The meeting between Christodoulides and al-Sisi also discussed regional developments, energy security, as well as the role that the Republic of Cyprus as the Presidency of the Council of the European Union could play in promoting common priorities with Egypt.
This shows that for Nicosia, natural gas is not only presented as an economic project, but also as an element of diplomatic utility to Brussels. At a time when Europe continues to look for more secure and diversified sources of supply, Cyprus is attempting to prove that it can offer something tangible.
The next step
Alongside the political contacts, President Christodoulides also had a meeting with the CEO of TotalEnergies, while Cypriot Energy Minister Michael Damianos was in Cairo to sign with his Egyptian counterpart Karim Badawi. The focus now shifts to the technical, investment and commercial decisions that will determine how quickly today’s agreement will translate into a real project.
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