Saipem Nets Multibillion-Dollar Job at World's Largest Offshore Gas Field

Monday, December 22, 2025

Italian engineering group Saipem has secured an offshore engineering, procurement, construction and installation contract in Qatar with a total value of about $4 billion, of which its share amounts to approximately $3.1 billion.

The contract was awarded by QatarEnergy LNG for the COMP5 package of the North Field Production Sustainability Offshore Compression Complexes project. Saipem is executing the work in partnership with Offshore Oil Engineering.

The North Field Production Sustainability project forms part of QatarEnergy LNG’s strategy to maintain and increase output from the North Field, the world’s largest non-associated natural gas field, located off Qatar’s northeastern coast.

The COMP5 package has a total duration of around five years and includes the engineering, procurement, fabrication and installation of two offshore compression complexes. Each complex will comprise a compression platform, a living quarters platform, a flare platform supporting the gas combustion system and the associated interconnecting bridges.

Each offshore complex will weigh about 68,000 tonnes. Offshore installation operations are scheduled to be carried out by Saipem’s heavy-lift vessel Saipem 7000 in 2029 and 2030.

The contract follows earlier awards of the COMP2 and COMP3 EPCI packages, which were awarded to Saipem in 2022 and 2024 and are currently under execution. The latest award further strengthens Saipem’s involvement in large-scale offshore projects in Qatar.

Qatar's North Field is one of the largest natural gas field in the world, with recoverable reserves of more than 900 trillion standard cubic feet (TSCF), or approximately 10% of the world's known reserves.

The North Field lies off the north-east shore of the Qatar peninsula and covers an area of more than 6,000 square kilometers, equivalent to about half the land area of the State of Qatar.

Additional gas quantities in the North Field are estimated at 240 trillion cubic feet, which raises Qatar’s gas reserves from 1,760 to more than 2,000 trillion cubic feet, and the condensates reserves from 70 to more than 80 billion barrels, in addition to large quantities of liquefied petroleum gas, ethane, and helium.

Categories: LNG Middle East Industry News Activity Europe Oil and Gas Natural Gas FLNG Floating Production

Related Stories

James Fisher, Aquaterra Launch Global Decommissioning Partnership

Tetragon Energy Advances Oil and Gas Exploration Activities off Philippines

Arabian Drilling Set to Resume Ops with Three Offshore Rigs

Dolphin Drilling’s Blackford Dolphin Secures More Work for Oil India

Israel Steps Up Mediterranean Gas Search

Perenco Inks Gas Sales Deal for Vietnamese Offshore Field

Qatari LNG Carriers Re-Enter Hormuz as Traffic Through Strait Slumps

Oil Edges Higher as Uncertainty Clouds US-Iran Truce

Capricorn Energy Grants Third Extension for Potential Takeover Offer

Indonesia Targets Higher Oil and Gas Output in 2027

Current News

Oil Rises 2% as Middle East Hostilities Escalate

Sunda Energy Applies for Exploration Permit Offshore New Zealand

Unity Enters Asia-Pacific Market with Malaysia P&A Work

Oil Surges to Four-Week High as US-Iran Trade Blows

Velesto Terminates NAGA 3 Jack-Up Rig Sale to Indonesian Firm

Noble Gets $136M Brunei Drillship Job

James Fisher, Aquaterra Launch Global Decommissioning Partnership

Tetragon Energy Advances Oil and Gas Exploration Activities off Philippines

Arabian Drilling Set to Resume Ops with Three Offshore Rigs

Oil Jumps 3% on Renewed US-Iran Conflict

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com