Saipem wins $4bn Qatar offshore gas project contract
16 September 2024
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QatarEnergy LNG, a subsidiary of state enterprise QatarEnergy, has awarded Italian contractor Saipem an estimated $4bn engineering, procurement, construction and installation (EPCI) contract as part of the second phase of its North Field Production Sustainability (NFPS) project.
Saipem has won combined packages COMP3A and COMP3B of the NFPS project’s second phase, it said in a statement on 16 September.
The scope of work on the combined packages encompasses EPCI of a total of six platforms, approximately 100 kilometres (km) of corrosion resistance alloy rigid subsea pipelines of 28-inches and 24-inches diameter, 100km of subsea composite cables, 150km of fibre optic cables and several other subsea units.
The aim of the second phase of the NFPS project is to support QatarEnergy’s North Field liquefied natural gas (LNG) expansion programme.
The second NFPS phase will mainly involve building gas compression facilities to sustain and gradually increase gas production from Qatar’s offshore North Field gas reserve over the long term.
This is the second contract win for Saipem in the NFPS project’s second phase, which consists of four main EPCI packages.
Prior to winning combined packages COMP3A and COMP3B, QatarEnergy LNG awarded Saipem a $4.5bn order in October 2022 to build and install gas compression facilities.
The main scope of work on the package, which is known as EPCI 2, covers two large gas compression complexes that will comprise decks, jackets, topsides, interconnecting bridges, flare platforms, living quarters and interface modules.
The gas compression complexes – CP65 and CP75 – will weigh 62,000 tonnes and 63,000 tonnes, respectively, and will be the largest fixed steel jacket compression platforms ever built.
NFPS first phase
Saipem is executing the main EPCI works on the entire first phase of the NFPS project, which consists of two packages.
Through the first phase of the NFPS scheme, QatarEnergy LNG aims to increase the early gas field production capacity of the North Field offshore development to 110 million tonnes a year.
QatarEnergy LNG, formerly Qatargas, awarded Saipem the contract for the EPCI package in February 2021. The package is the larger of the two NFPS phase one packages and has a value of $1.7bn.
Saipem’s scope of work on the EPCI package encompasses building several offshore facilities for extracting and transporting natural gas, including platforms, supporting and connecting structures, subsea cables and anti-corrosion internally clad pipelines.
The scope of work also includes decommissioning a pipeline and other significant modifications to existing offshore facilities.
In addition, in April 2021, QatarEnergy LNG awarded Saipem two options for additional work within the EPCI package, worth about $350m.
QatarEnergy LNG awarded Saipem the second package of the NFPS phase one project, estimated to be worth $1bn, in March 2021.
Saipem’s scope of work on the package, known as EPCL, mainly covers installing three offshore export trunklines running almost 300km from their respective offshore platforms to the QatarEnergy LNG north and south plants located in Ras Laffan Industrial City.
Saipem has performed the front-end engineering and design work on the main production package of the first phase of the NFPS as part of a $20m contract that it was awarded in January 2019. This provided a competitive advantage to the Italian contractor in its bid to win the package.
Saipem expects to complete work on both packages of the first phase of the NFPS project by the end of 2024.
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29 November 2024
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The five official gigaprojects named by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud are: Diriyah, Neom, Qiddiya, Roshn and the projects being developed by Red Sea Global.
While the growth in awards on these schemes in 2024 is positive, the pace of activity falls short of the strong growth that was expected as the gigaprojects move into the delivery phase.
The highlights for 2024 have been a $4.7bn contract to build dams at the Trojena mountain resort that was won by Italy’s WeBuild, a $2bn contract won by a joint venture (JV) of local firm Albawani and Qatar’s Urbacon Trading & Contracting for the construction of assets in the Wadi Safar development of the Diriyah project in Riyadh, and a $1bn contract secured by a JV of Spanish firm FCC Construction and local firm Nesma & Partners to build the Prince Mohammed Bin Salman Stadium at the Qiddiya City project on the outskirts of Riyadh.
These awards appear to confirm the consensus in Saudi Arabia that the focus for development is on projects underpinned by events. These are Trojena, which will host the Asian Winter Games in 2029; stadiums for the Asian Cup in 2027 and the Fifa World Cup in 2034; along with Expo 2030 Riyadh and the Asian Games in 2034.
There is also a view that projects in and around Riyadh are being prioritised ahead of schemes in remote areas.
The stabilisation of activity in 2024, rather than the expected growth, combined with the intermittent nature of contract awards, has led to concerns about the prospects for the future of the market.
The concerns peaked when no contract awards were recorded in August on any of the five official gigaprojects, but were abated when there were several high-profile awards in September and October, most notably the Qiddiya stadium deal.
The Line
The most scruntinised project in 2024 has been The Line at Neom.
Since January, there have been reports about how the delivery of The Line will be phased, as well as rephasing exercises for other projects as budgets came under strain. Neom effectively confirmed these reports in November, when it said it is focused on the initial phases of infrastructure and enabling works for the new city.
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Joint venture wins Jeddah airport terminal deal
29 November 2024
Jeddah Airports Company (Jedco) has awarded a contract to a joint venture of the local Algihaz Contracting and Turkiye’s TAV for the rehabilitation of the South Terminal at King Abdulaziz International airport (KAIA) in Jeddah.
The project involves fully rehabilitating the old South Terminal to welcome pilgrims arriving in Jeddah for Umrah and Hajj pilgrimages.
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KAIA has three operational terminals. Opened in 2018, Terminal 1 is one of the world’s largest passenger terminals, and caters primarily for the state carrier Saudia and domestic flights. The North Terminal handles international airlines, while the Hajj Terminal is dedicated to pilgrim traffic. Operations from the South Terminal were transferred to Terminal 1 when it closed in 2020.
Jedco has plans to transform KAIA into one of the world’s largest airports with a SR115bn ($31bn) expansion plan that will increase its capacity to 114 million passengers a year.
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Saudi gigaprojects create long-term construction market
28 November 2024
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Speakers participating in a panel discussion on Saudi Arabia’s gigaprojects at MEED’s Mena Construction Summit 2024 in Dubai on 20 November discussed the progress of what is shaping up to be the world’s largest construction programme.
There are five official gigaprojects in the kingdom. They are Diriyah, Neom, Qiddiya, Red Sea Global’s projects and Roshn. All five are subsidiaries of the Public Investment Fund (PIF). In addition to these projects, there is a wide range of other very large schemes commonly referred to as gigaprojects, such as New Murabba and King Salman Park.
These projects, launched from 2017 onwards, have faced and continue to face considerable delivery challenges. Due to their vast scale, one of the main challenges has been attracting construction resources to the kingdom. The panellists said that while progress has been made in this regard, lots of work still needs to be done.
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Regional contractors have also played a role, with GCC-based contractors such as Dubai-based Alec and Qatar’s UCC securing major contracts. Egyptian companies have also played an important role with contractors such as Hassan Allam winning work.
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Local firm bids $277m for Bahrain’s signature bridge
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Manama-based Haji Hassan Group has submitted the lowest bid for a contract to build package four of the Busaiteen Link road scheme.
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