Visit our new Alternative Investment section.Click here

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Saipem poised to return in Venezuela after U.S. sanctions easing

Wed, 25th Feb 2026 13:29

MILAN, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Italian oil contractor Saipem is ready to resume activities in Venezuela ​after ‌the easing of U.S. sanctions as it expects demand emerging from oil majors later this year, Chief Executive Alessandro Puliti ⁠said on Wednesday.

"Things in Venezuela are changing very quickly. It's ⁠a country where we worked a ​lot in the past, and we are ready to return as soon as there is demand from clients," Puliti said in a post-results call.

Contracts could come from both international and U.S. oil companies, Puliti ​said, adding ‌these groups were currently assessing the situation and devising plans for the Latin American country.

"As of today, we have not received requests to participate in a tender or to carry out engineering studies in preparation for tenders... I expect this may come later in the course of the year," ​he told a press briefing.

The United States relaxed sanctions on Venezuela's energy sector earlier this month, ‌issuing two general licenses that allow global energy companies to operate oil and gas projects in the OPEC member and for other companies ‌to negotiate contracts to bring in fresh investments.

The Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control issued a general license to Chevron, BP, Eni , Shell and Repsol, who still have offices in the country ​and stakes in projects, and are among the main partners of state-run company PDVSA.

The country has vast oil reserves ‌but majors and energy contractors face a

dilapidated

energy infrastructure.

WORKING FOR MOZAMBIQUE PROJECT'S RESTART

In

Mozambique

, where TotalEnergies and the government have announced the restart of a $20 billion liquefied natural gas project, Saipem is currently working with the ⁠French company ⁠to review orders after a long suspension.

"Currently, we are revisiting purchase ‌orders and subcontracts to reflect escalation and resumption costs, but this process will not be completed by the end of ​the first quarter of this ​year," Puliti said.

Saipem still expects to complete its

merger

with Norway's Subsea7 ‌in the second half, Puliti said.

The energy contractor said on Tuesday it expected its adjusted core

earnings

to rise to roughly 1.9 billion euros ($2.2 billion) this year, from 1.7 billion euros in 2025. ($1 = 0.8488 euros) (Reporting by Francesca Landini, editing by Alvise Armellini and Louise Heavens)

Corporate News Commodities Oil & Gas Utilities Saipem Chevron BP Eni Shell Total Energies Subsea 7

Shares in this article

Related News

TRADING UPDATES: Prospex gas sales rise, expects cash to increase
1 day ago

TRADING UPDATES: Prospex gas sales rise, expects cash to increase

(Alliance News) - The following is a round-up of updates by London-listed companies, issued on Friday and not separately reported by Alliance News:

Oil & Gas Union Jack + 8 more shares
BP to cut pipeline gas trading team as LNG focus grows, sources say
1 day ago

BP to cut pipeline gas trading team as LNG focus grows, sources say

LONDON, ​May ⁠15 (Reuters) - BP plans to dismantle its ​pipeline gas trading team, as the oil major focuses on expanding its ​liquefied ‌natural gas (...

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Oil price gains and Westminster worry sink stocks
1 day ago

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Oil price gains and Westminster worry sink stocks

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 slumped on Friday as talks between the US and China failed to deliver hoped for progress on the Middle East adding to j...

Market News Hiscox + 12 more shares