Daily Newsletter

10 August 2023

Daily Newsletter

10 August 2023

Saipem secures $1bn contract for Libyan offshore gas project

Saipem will upgrade the platforms and facilities related to the Bouri gas field offshore Libya.

Archana Rani August 10 2023

Italian energy services group Saipem has secured a contract worth around $1bn (€910m) for the development of the Bouri Gas Utilisation Project (BGUP) in Libya.

The contract has been awarded by Mellitah Oil & Gas B.V. Libyan Branch, a consortium of the National Oil Corporation of Libya and Eni North Africa.

Italian energy major Eni owns a 31% stake in Saipem and also jointly controls both Saipem and Mellitah Oil & Gas B.V.

Saipem said the contract is considered as a "related party transaction" based on Italian market regulation. However, it was "completed in market-equivalent or standard terms".

Under the contract, the company will be responsible for upgrading the platforms and the facilities related to the Bouri gas field offshore Libya.

The field is situated in water depths between 145m and 183m in the Mediterranean Sea.

The scope of the contract includes the engineering, procurement, construction, installation and commissioning of an approximately 5,000-tonne gas recovery module onto the existing DP4 offshore facility.

Saipem will also lay 28km of pipelines to connect the DP3, DP4 and Sabratha platforms.

The company plans to undertake main lifting operations using the semi-submersible crane vessel Saipem 7000.

The company said in a statement: “With this award, Saipem confirms its commitment and competitive positioning offshore Libya. The completion of the project will make an important contribution to reducing CO₂ emissions in Libya.”

ESG 2.0 marks a shift towards stricter environmental rules

ESG is moving into a different era, which we call ESG 2.0. While ESG 1.0 was driven by voluntary corporate action, spurred by pressure from activist consumers and investors, ESG 2.0 is being driven by a new wave of government policies. The EU has taken the regulatory lead, with rules introduced or in the pipeline that will price emissions, regulate the use of the terms ‘ESG’ and ‘sustainability’ in marketing materials, and make ESG reporting mandatory. The US has taken a different approach, favoring less regulation and more financial support in the form of tax breaks for clean industry (renewables plus nuclear and hydrogen). China is planning to expand its emissions trading system to more sectors, decarbonize its heavy industry, and ramp up its use of renewables. The new policy direction is mainly motivated by the ambition to hit net zero emissions targets. But on top of this, governments are now competing for clean industry and trying to challenge China’s leadership on the production of the world’s green technologies such as solar panels and batteries, as well as the production and refinement of materials needed for energy transition such as lithium. These driving forces are leading to policy that will impact every sector, not just heavy industry, and will keep ESG near the top of the regulatory agenda over the longer term.

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