Discover our projects
We make challenging decisions everyday in order to bring unique ventures to life. We selected some of our projects that best showcase our approach and vision.
All solutions
Learn more about all our key projects to discover the solutions we apply in the design and construction of innovative, safe, sustainable, and complex infrastructures and plants both offshore and onshore.
Discovered in March 2009, the Jangkrik Gas Field is located about 70 km from the coast of Borneo, Indonesia, at a water depth ranging from 250 to 500m.
The first deep-water production system in Guyanese waters, with a water depth of 1,500 m to 2,100 m and also the first and only onshore fabrication yard for subsea structures in Guyana.
The Dogger Bank Offshore Development Zone, located between 125 and 290km off the east coast of Yorkshire, extends for an area nearly as large as Greater London, at a water depths ranging from 18m to 63m.
Saipem, in tandem with Saudi Aramco, achieved a new pipeline shore pull record with the Berri Downstream Pipeline. Shore pull operations were conducted by utilizing the biggest and most powerful linear pulling winch ever used in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which has an 800-ton pulling capacity.
PGU III is the last stage of the PGU project, which was executed in order to provide natural gas from fields located off the west coast of the Malaysian Peninsula to end users in Malaysia and in Singapore.
The Oil & Gas twin onshore pipeline system in the harsh subarctic environment of Sakhalin Island in the Russian Far East is one of the world’s biggest integrated Oil & Gas projects, that connects the Piltun-Astkhskoye and Lunskoye field's landfalls in the NE of Sakhalin Island to the LNG Plant & Oil Export Terminal in the South.
QAFCO V and VI is the world’s largest and most demanding fertilizer complex, built across three sites in Qatar, featuring advanced efficiency and sustainability solutions to ensure high reliability and full environmental compliance.
Stockholm Exergi BECCS is an innovative project for the capture and permanent storage of 800,000 tonnes of biogenic CO₂ per year, obtained from the treatment of flue gases from Stockholm’s biomass-fueled power plant.
The Profertil project in Bahìa Blanca was at the time of its construction the largest single train plant in the world with the capacity of 3,250 tons/day of urea.
Located 260 km offshore Luanda (Angola) the development of Kaombo Field began in 2014 with the EPCI contract award from Total Angola for the engineering, procurement, construction, installation, commissioning, and operation and maintenance of two turret- moored FPSO units.