Kuwait cancels major oil tender

7 October 2025

 

The tender for the Kuwaiti oil project focused on the installation of a separation gathering centre (SGC), known as SGC-2, has been cancelled by Kuwait’s Central Agency for Public Tenders (Capt), according to industry sources.

The tender was cancelled in mid‑August because the low bid exceeded the project’s budget, sources said.

In May, MEED reported that the low bid submitted by UK-based engineering company Petrofac for the oil project had come in at more than double the project’s proposed budget.

Petrofac submitted a bid of KD422.45m ($1.37bn); the provisional budget for the project was KD207m ($670.2m).

Petrofac’s bid beat that of India‑based Larsen & Toubro, which was the only other bidder, with a price of KD441.07m.

The project is located in the eastern region of Kuwait referred to as EK‑2, and its scope also includes debottlenecking work in addition to the installation of the main units.

The client on the project is state-owned upstream operator Kuwait Oil Company (KOC).

When the project was originally tendered in June 2024, the following companies were prequalified to bid:

  • Hyundai Engineering & Construction Company (South Korea)
  • Samsung Engineering (South Korea)
  • Saipem (Italy)
  • Sinopec Luoyang Engineering Company (China)
  • Sinopec Engineering Incorporation (China)
  • Tecnicas Reunidas (Spain)
  • Larsen & Toubro (India)
  • Daewoo Engineering & Construction (South Korea)
  • Petrofac International (UK)
  • GS Engineering & Construction (South Korea)

After years of delays in Kuwait’s oil sector, many projects have seen bids come in over budget.

In May, MEED revealed that the lowest bid for the contract to develop a new fuel depot in Kuwait’s Al-Mutlaa area came in 43% above the project’s target budget.

The client on the project is state-owned downstream operator Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC).

Lebanon’s Consolidated Contractors Company (CCC) submitted a low bid of KD357.3m ($1.16bn) for the project, ahead of a deadline on 22 December last year.


READ THE OCTOBER 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF

Private sector takes on expanded role; Riyadh shifts towards strategic expenditure; MEED’s 2025 power developer ranking

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Wil Crisp
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