Jordanian plans to buy gas from Israel have aroused fierce opposition in the kingdom at a time of mounting criticism of the Jewish state's policies towards the Palestinians.
Parliament began debating the proposed gas deal on Tuesday, after 79 lawmakers in the 150-seat house filed a motion calling for it to be scrapped.
"Gas supply is part of national security, so how can we link it to an enemy who does not respect its commitments?" asked Jamal Qamwa, who heads parliament's energy commission.
"We are bound to Israel by a peace treaty, but it does not respect it… It is also attacking our people (Palestinians) in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip," he told AFP.
"This whole issue is not about importing gas or about prices. Buying from Israel will make us hostage to the Zionist enemy," he said.
US giant Noble Energy announced in September that Israel would supply Jordan with 1.6 trillion cubic feet of natural gas from its Leviathan offshore field over a period of 15 years.
Leviathan is majority-owned by three Israeli companies, with 40 percent owned by Noble.
A source close to the deal, which has yet to be approved by the Jordanian government, said it would be worth $15 billion (11.4 billion euros).
The gas to be delivered to the National Electric Power Company would help reduce Jordan's annual energy bill by around two billion dollars.
Energy-poor Jordan was heavily reliant on Egyptian gas supplies, until they ground to a halt following a spate of bomb attacks since 2011 on the export pipeline through Egypt's restive Sinai Peninsula.
The government has said Jordan's energy bill this year reached four billion dinars ($5.5 million), or 40 percent of the overall budget, a figure it is determined to cut.
But critics say Israel has failed to meet its commitments under a 1994 peace treaty with Jordan and instead stepped up "violations" against the Palestinians.
Unpopular treaty
The 20-year-old treaty between Jordan and Israel is deeply unpopular among Jordanians — almost half of whom are of Palestinian origin.
The treaty was sorely tested by last summer's 50-day war between Israel and militants in Gaza where nearly 2,200 Palestinians were killed, most of them civilians.
Jordan last month recalled its ambassador from Tel Aviv after Israel deployed police inside Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa mosque compound during clashes triggered by a vow by Jewish far-right groups to visit the holy site.
The status of Jerusalem is one of the most contentious issues of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Jordanians have taken to the streets to protest Israeli "violations" in Jerusalem and urge the government to revoke the treaty with Israel.
The Islamic Action Front, political wing of the Jordanian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, warned that buying Israeli gas would bolster the "economy of the Zionist enemy and contribute to the killing of our people in Palestine".
Jordan defends deal
Jordan's government has defended the proposed gas deal.
"We will take strategic measures to address the energy crisis in accordance with the national interest," Energy Minister Mohamed Hamed said in parliament.
Buying gas from Israel "does not threaten the future of Jordan nor does it leave Jordan's economy hostage in the hands of any country," he said.
The minister said the deal could help avert more drastic measures such as daily power cuts or rising electricity bills.
Hamed said high energy costs have severely strained the economy in cash-strapped Jordan, faced with an external debt of more than $23 billion.