Eni to Invest $26 Billion in North Africa

Tuesday, April 8, 2025
© Dmytro Surkov / Adobe Stock

Italian energy group Eni will invest around 24 billion euros ($26.24 billion) in Algeria, Libya and Egypt over the next four years to help boost energy production, CEO Claudio Descalzi said on Tuesday.

The investments would coincide with the Rome government's efforts to relaunch its economic and political ties with Africa as part of its so-called Mattei Plan.

Eni is already a major foreign investor in North Africa's energy sector.

Descalzi said the three countries can play an important role as hydrocarbon suppliers for Europe, but need outside investment to expand their energy production and meet rising domestic demand.

"Internal demand in these countries - because of demographic growth - is increasing at about 7-8% every year, this means they need gas ... they need investment," he told an energy conference in the Italian city of Ravenna.

In the next four years, Eni will invest more than 8 billion euros each in Algeria and Libya, and about the same in Egypt, Descalzi said.

Egypt had planned to become a major gas exporter after Eni discovered the Zohr offshore gas field there in 2015. However, domestic gas production in the country has been falling since 2021, and reached a six-year low in 2024.

Earlier this year, Cyprus and Egypt signed a deal to process the gas coming from Cyprus's offshore fields to Egypt, exported by Eni, for liquefaction and re-export to Europe.


(Reuters - Reporting by Francesca Landini, editing by Alvise Armellini and Rachna Uppal)


Categories: Offshore Industry News

Related Stories

Subsea7 Secures Contract Extension for Seven Viking Subsea Vessel

Subsea7 Secures Contract Extension for Seven Viking Subsea Vessel

DOF Gets Subsea Mooring Installation Job in Asia Pacific

DOF Gets Subsea Mooring Installation Job in Asia Pacific

US Revokes Licenses for Trinidad-Venezuela Gas Projects

US Revokes Licenses for Trinidad-Venezuela Gas Projects

Current News

Mitigate SCC & HE to Keep Offshore Metal Structures Ship Shape

Saipem Renews Offshore Activities Agreement With Saudi Aramco

Equinor to Stop Offshore Construction of Empire Wind Project in US

Greensand CCS Scheme in North Sea Lines Up First CO2 Storage Customer

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News

Offshore Engineer Magazine