Offshore/subsea systems

TechnipFMC Secures Subsea Contract for Eni’s Maha Field in Indonesia

The contract will cover the design and manufacturing of tree systems, flexible flowlines, a manifold, and controls, as well as installation of the subsea production system.

jangkrik-nave-vista-aerea.jpg
The Maha will tie back to the existing Jangkrik FPU, seen here.
Source: Eni

TechnipFMC has been awarded a $250 million to $500-million subsea contract for the Eni-operated deepwater Maha project in East Kalimantan, offshore Indonesia. The engineering, procurement, construction, and installation contract will cover the design and manufacturing of Subsea 2.0 tree systems, flexible flowlines, a manifold, and controls, as well as installation of the subsea production system.

This project will mark Eni’s first use of TechnipFMC’s Subsea 2.0 configure-to-order technology in Indonesia. According to the company, Subsea 2.0's offerings of industrialized and standardized pre-engineered configurable products include compact trees, compact manifolds, and flexible jumpers.

“The Maha development provides a significant opportunity to strengthen our relationship with Eni and deliver greater timeline certainty through the application of Subsea 2.0 technologies and integrated delivery,” said TechnipFMC’s President of Subsea Business, Jonathan Landes.

Eni has been active in Indonesia since 2001 and has previously worked with TechnipFMC on projects in the region, including Jangkrik and Merakes. Maha will tie back to the existing Jangkrik floating production unit (FPU).

Hydrocarbon production in Indonesia is concentrated in the Jangkrik gas field, located offshore in the Kutei Basin within the Muara Bakau block, with production supported by the Jangkrik FPU that connects ten subsea wells.

The Maha gas field, first discovered in 2002, is part of the West Ganal block in water depth of 3,657 ft.

Eni serves as operator of Maha and holds 40% interest, along with Neptune Energy (30%) and Pertamina (30%).