Petrofac oil bid in Kuwait is double proposed budget

22 May 2025

 

The low bid submitted by UK-based engineering company Petrofac for the Kuwaiti oil project focused on the installation of a separation gathering centre (SGC) known as SGC-2 has come in at more than double the project’s proposed budget, according to industry sources.

Petrofac submitted a bid of KD422.45m ($1.37bn) and the provisional budget for the project is KD207m ($670.2m), according to industry sources.

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.

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)
Petrofac’s problems

Two weeks ago, Petrofac’s shares on the London Stock Exchange were temporarily suspended after the beleaguered engineering and construction contractor failed to publish its 2024 results on time.

This suspension was enacted at the same time that Wood, another engineering and construction company, was also forced to suspend trading in its stock because it was unable to publish its annual report by 30 April.

In March, Petrofac said that it would defer publication of its 2024 results amid its long-running restructuring process.

Earlier this month, Petrofac received formal approval from the High Court of England & Wales to implement its restructuring plan.

The company, which has billions of dollars-worth of projects in the Middle East and North Africa region, has said that the approved plan will unlock $355m in new funding for its operations.

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Wil Crisp
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