Israeli envoy to Dubai says ties won’t be harmed if massive UAE oil deal is axed
Ilan Sztulman Starosta predicts trade between Jewish state and Gulf nation will ‘easily’ surpass $1 billion within a year if the COVID pandemic abates

Israel’s top diplomat in Dubai has said that the Jewish state’s burgeoning relationship with the United Arab Emirates will not be damaged if a massive deal to ship Emirati oil is axed due to environmental concerns.
Ilan Sztulman Starosta, who heads Israel’s first consulate in the UAE economic hub, told AFP that “it won’t affect the relationship” with the United Arab Emirates if the flagship Gulf oil deal flounders.
His assessment came after Israel froze the deal last month over fears that spills could threaten unique coral reefs in the Red Sea.
Environmentalists had voiced anger over the plan to ship more Emirati crude to Israel’s Red Sea port of Eilat, and transport it via an aging pipeline to Ashkelon on the Mediterranean coast for onward transport to Europe. The UAE is already using the pipeline to a limited extent, and the deal would expand that use.
“Now it’s a technical environment issue, and the project was frozen because of fear that this pipeline, which is very old, is not well kept enough for the oil to pass through and there’s danger of leaks,” Sztulman Starosta said in an interview.
He nonetheless expressed optimism that the project would be given the green light, saying that he trusted the Environment Ministry would “check what’s needed to make it foolproof… and eventually I hope that this is going to be open again because it’s a very good deal for both the Emirates and the State of Israel.”

‘Absolutely huge’ potential
Last year, the UAE broke with decades of Arab consensus that there should be no normalization of ties with Israel without a comprehensive and lasting peace with the Palestinians.
Following the US-brokered deal with the UAE, Israel normalized relations with Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan as well.
Foreign Minister Yair Lapid made a landmark visit to the UAE in July, opening an embassy in Abu Dhabi and a consulate in Dubai, while the UAE established an embassy in Tel Aviv.

Business exchanges between the two sides were already robust and Sztulman Starosta said Israel-UAE trade hit $500 million in August, excluding investments, after deals ranging from tourism and aviation to financial services.
“I’m being conservative, I think we might double the trade volume in one year, if COVID goes away,” he said. “Because the potential is absolutely huge for both sides… I think we can very easily achieve this.”
About 200,000 Israelis have visited the UAE since the establishment of ties, Sztulman Starosta added, with an estimated 40 Israeli companies setting up in UAE free-trade zones.
People-to-people exchanges include the first two Emirati students to attend an Israeli university, and the birth of Sztulman Starosta’s own daughter in Dubai last month — the first Israeli born in the UAE following the Abraham Accords.

“Because we never had such a case, we don’t know how to register her properly,” he said.
“We don’t have the agreements to recognize [her], but this is one of the challenges that I like about it because she was born here in Dubai in a Dubai hospital treated by a Muslim doctor.
“This is the real peace happening, not just signing agreements,” he said.