TechnipFMC
TechnipFMC plc is a UK-domiciled multinational engineering and technology company that provides subsea systems, surface technologies, and integrated project solutions primarily to the oil, gas, and emerging energy sectors.[1][2]
The company originated from the 2017 merger of France-based Technip S.A., an engineering firm founded in 1958 specializing in onshore and offshore projects, and U.S.-based FMC Technologies, Inc., established in 2000 as a provider of subsea production and processing systems.[3][4]
Headquartered in London, TechnipFMC operates globally with a focus on delivering end-to-end solutions for deepwater developments, including subsea production equipment, umbilicals, risers, flowlines, and surface wellhead systems, positioning it as a key player in offshore oilfield services.[5][6]
In 2021, it completed a corporate separation, spinning off its onshore and offshore engineering, procurement, and construction business into the independent Technip Energies entity, allowing TechnipFMC to concentrate on subsea and surface technologies amid shifting energy demands.[7]
As of third-quarter 2025, the company reported strong inbound orders exceeding $2.6 billion, reflecting robust demand in subsea projects and its adaptation to both traditional hydrocarbon extraction and new energy applications like offshore floating renewables.[8]
Corporate Profile
Formation and Legal Structure
TechnipFMC plc was established through the combination of Technip S.A., a French engineering and construction firm, and FMC Technologies, Inc., a U.S.-based provider of subsea and surface equipment, via an all-stock merger announced on May 19, 2016.[9] The transaction, valued at approximately $13 billion including debt, positioned the new entity as a leader in subsea, offshore, and onshore energy projects, with the merger completing on January 17, 2017, after shareholder and regulatory approvals.[10] [11] As part of the merger structure, a new holding company, TechnipFMC, was initially incorporated as a wholly owned subsidiary under the laws of England and Wales on December 9, 2015, prior to the deal's public announcement, to facilitate the integration.[12] Following the merger's closure, TechnipFMC plc became the parent entity, operating as a public limited company with dual listings on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: FTI) and Euronext Paris.[1] The company's legal registered office is at Hadrian House, Wincomblee Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 3PL, United Kingdom, while its operational headquarters are in Houston, Texas, reflecting a structure optimized for global operations and U.S. market access.[13] [14]Leadership and Governance
Douglas J. Pferdehirt serves as Chair and Chief Executive Officer of TechnipFMC plc, a position he has held since the company's formation through the 2017 merger of Technip and FMC Technologies. Prior to the merger, Pferdehirt was President and Chief Executive Officer of FMC Technologies, bringing extensive experience in subsea and surface technologies to the integrated entity.[15][16] The executive leadership team includes Alf Melin as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, responsible for financial strategy and operations; Cristina Aalders as Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer, and Secretary, overseeing legal affairs and corporate governance; and business unit presidents such as Jonathan Landes for Subsea and Thierry Conti for Surface Technologies. Additional key roles encompass Justin Rounce as Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, focusing on innovation across energy projects, and specialized executives for New Energy and People & Culture.[15] The Board of Directors comprises nine members, including Chair Pferdehirt and independent directors such as Lead Director Claire S. Farley, Eleazar de Carvalho Filho, Robert G. Gwin, John O'Leary, Margareth Øvrum, Kay G. Priestly, John Yearwood, and Sophie Zurquiyah. The board oversees strategy, risk management, and long-term value creation, with a structure emphasizing independence from management to align with shareholder interests.[16] TechnipFMC's governance framework is guided by Corporate Governance Guidelines that promote integrity, board independence, and effective oversight of executive performance. The board operates through three standing committees: the Audit Committee, which monitors financial reporting and internal controls; the Compensation and Talent Committee, responsible for executive pay and talent development; and the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Committee, addressing sustainability and regulatory compliance. These committees ensure rigorous review of operations, with the full board retaining authority on major decisions such as mergers and strategic initiatives.[17][18]Global Presence and Scale
TechnipFMC operates in 38 countries, with a workforce of approximately 21,000 employees representing 117 nationalities, enabling it to deliver integrated energy projects across diverse global markets.[1] The company's legal headquarters are in Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom, while its operational headquarters are located in Houston, Texas, facilitating coordination of subsea, surface, and project management activities worldwide.[19] In 2024, TechnipFMC reported full-year revenue of $9.1 billion, reflecting its scale in serving clients in traditional and emerging energy sectors, supported by a backlog of $14.4 billion at year-end.[1][20] The firm's manufacturing footprint includes specialized facilities such as the SPS manufacturing plant in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for subsea production systems; a flowline facility in Stephenville, Texas; and extensive operations in Houston for subsea equipment assembly and testing.[19][21] These sites, combined with engineering and project delivery centers in regions including Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America, allow TechnipFMC to execute large-scale offshore and onshore projects with localized expertise while leveraging global supply chains.[22] The company maintains approximately 76 office and operational locations globally, underscoring its diversified presence beyond North America, where international revenue constitutes a significant portion of its operations.[23] TechnipFMC's fleet of 16 vessels supports its subsea installation and intervention capabilities, deployed in key basins such as the North Sea, Gulf of Mexico, Brazil's pre-salt fields, and West Africa.[1] This maritime infrastructure, paired with technological leadership in integrated project delivery, positions the company as a major player in energy infrastructure, with broad geographic diversification mitigating regional market volatility as noted by credit rating analyses.[22]Historical Development
Origins of Predecessor Companies
Technip originated as the Compagnie Française d'Etudes et de Construction Technip, established on October 20, 1958, in Paris by the Institut Français du Pétrole (IFP), a French public research institution focused on petroleum technologies.[24] Initially comprising 100 employees, the company was tasked with providing engineering, procurement, and construction services for the hydrocarbon processing sector, leveraging IFP's expertise in refining and petrochemical processes.[25] By the 1960s, Technip expanded into pipeline engineering and offshore activities, driven by France's post-war energy independence efforts and global oil demand growth.[1] FMC Technologies traces its lineage to specialized oilfield equipment development within the broader FMC Corporation, which began in 1883 when John Bean invented a piston pump for orchard insecticide spraying in California to combat pests like San Jose scale.[26] The oil and gas segment evolved from the 1927 founding of Oil Center Tool Company (O-C-T), a California-based firm producing wellhead and drilling equipment, which FMC Corporation acquired in 1957 to bolster its energy machinery portfolio.[27] In 1973, this became FMC's Wellhead Equipment Division, focusing on subsea and surface systems amid rising North Sea and Gulf of Mexico exploration; the division was spun off as an independent entity, FMC Technologies, Inc., in 2001 following FMC Corporation's divestiture of non-chemical assets to concentrate on agriculture and industrial chemicals.[27] Headquartered in Houston, Texas, FMC Technologies specialized in subsea production systems, trees, and manifolds, capitalizing on technological advances in deepwater drilling during the 1980s and 1990s.[27]The 2017 Merger and Integration
The merger between Technip S.A. and FMC Technologies, Inc. was announced on May 19, 2016, as an all-stock transaction to form TechnipFMC plc, a new holding company incorporated in the United Kingdom.[9] Under the terms, each Technip share was converted into two shares of TechnipFMC, while each FMC Technologies share was converted into one share, resulting in an approximate 50/50 ownership split between the legacy shareholders of both entities.[28] The deal was structured as a cross-border merger involving Technip merging into a TechnipFMC subsidiary followed by FMC Technologies merging into another subsidiary, with the combined entity listing shares on the New York Stock Exchange and Euronext Paris under the ticker FTI.[29] Shareholder approvals were obtained from both companies' investors, alongside regulatory clearances including early termination of the U.S. Hart-Scott-Rodino antitrust waiting period and approval from France's Autorité des Marchés Financiers.[30] [12] The UK's High Court of Justice sanctioned the cross-border aspects on December 22, 2016, setting the closing date for after business on January 16, 2017.[31] The mergers closed on that date, with TechnipFMC commencing operations as a unified company on January 17, 2017, and pro forma 2015 revenues reaching approximately $12.5 billion from the predecessors' combined activities.[10] Post-merger integration focused on realizing $200 million in annual cost synergies, primarily through supply chain efficiencies, real estate optimization, and corporate overhead reductions, though the process incurred $101.8 million in transaction and integration expenses during 2017, including advisory fees, severance, and systems harmonization.[9] [32] Challenges included uncertainties in retaining key executives and employees amid the transition, as well as risks that the combined operations might not fully capture anticipated benefits due to cultural differences between the French-headquartered Technip and U.S.-based FMC Technologies.[33] Despite these, the integration enabled the company to leverage FMC's subsea expertise with Technip's project delivery capabilities, positioning TechnipFMC as a diversified provider in oil and gas upstream and midstream sectors.[9] SEC filings noted that while initial steps like IT system convergence and organizational restructuring proceeded, full synergy realization depended on sustained execution beyond 2017.[34]Key Milestones Post-Merger
Following the completion of the merger on January 17, 2017, TechnipFMC reported full-year orders of $14.3 billion in 2018, marking a 40% increase from the prior year, driven by subsea and surface technologies segments.[35] This performance included early delivery milestones on major projects such as Yamal LNG Train 1 in Russia, contributing to improved operating margins.[35] In August 2019, the company announced plans to separate into two independent publicly traded entities: one focused on onshore/offshore project delivery (later Technip Energies) and the other on subsea and surface technologies, aiming to enhance strategic focus and capital allocation amid distinct market dynamics.[36] The separation process, initially targeted for early 2020, faced delays due to market conditions but resumed in January 2021.[14] The demerger was completed on February 15, 2021, with Technip Energies distributed as a one-for-five share dividend to TechnipFMC shareholders, allowing the remaining TechnipFMC to concentrate on subsea systems, surface technologies, and integrated project delivery.[7] Post-separation, TechnipFMC achieved recognition for innovations, including its iProduction™ system winning the Best Production Technology Award at the 2021 World Oil Awards for enabling remote subsea interventions.[37] By 2024, TechnipFMC recorded revenue of $9.1 billion, a 16% year-over-year increase, alongside a 47% rise in adjusted EBITDA to $1.2 billion, supported by record subsea inbound orders exceeding $10 billion and a backlog growth to $14.4 billion.[38] These results reflected sustained execution in high-value contracts, such as integrated EPCI awards for fields in Norway and Brazil, positioning the company as a leader in subsea production systems.[20]Core Business Operations
Subsea Systems and Services
TechnipFMC's Subsea segment delivers end-to-end solutions for underwater hydrocarbon production, encompassing the design, manufacturing, installation, and lifecycle management of subsea production systems (SPS) and subsea umbilicals, risers, and flowlines (SURF). These systems enable operators to develop and operate subsea fields by providing equipment such as subsea trees, manifolds, templates, wellheads, flexible and rigid pipelines, umbilicals, and connection systems, which facilitate the control, monitoring, and flow of production fluids from wellheads to surface facilities.[39][40] The segment's integrated Engineering, Procurement, Construction, and Installation (iEPCI™) model combines front-end engineering with execution to optimize project delivery, reducing interfaces and enhancing efficiency for clients in deepwater environments. Key technologies include Subsea 2.0®, a standardized, configurable product platform that industrializes subsea hardware manufacturing to lower costs and shorten lead times by leveraging modular designs and pre-engineered components. Additional capabilities cover subsea processing systems for boosting production and separating fluids at the seabed, well control systems with high-pressure manifolds and tie-ins, and subsea drilling services featuring wellhead systems, specialized tooling, and remote monitoring.[40][41][42] TechnipFMC's integrated Life of Field (iLOF®) services extend support across the asset lifecycle, from installation and commissioning to maintenance, modifications, and decommissioning, aiming to maximize field recovery rates through optimized interventions and digital monitoring tools. In 2024, the Subsea segment reported revenue of approximately $7.6 billion, reflecting a 21.5% year-over-year increase driven by higher project executions and backlog conversion, with inbound orders reaching $10.4 billion, including integrated EPCI contracts. Notable recent awards include a September 2025 contract from Petrobras for subsea production systems across multiple greenfield and brownfield developments in Brazil, and a substantial order from ExxonMobil for the Hammerhead project in Guyana, involving engineering and manufacturing of production and water injection systems.[40][43][44][45] The segment's performance is bolstered by global manufacturing facilities and installation vessels, supporting operations in key basins like the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil, West Africa, and the North Sea, where subsea tie-backs and full-field developments predominate. In the third quarter of 2025, Subsea revenue reached $2.32 billion, up 4.6% from the prior quarter, underscoring sustained demand amid rising deepwater investments.[1][46]Surface Technologies
Surface Technologies is one of TechnipFMC's two primary business units, focusing on the design, manufacture, and supply of equipment and systems for onshore and shallow-water oil and gas production, extending from well construction to export pipelines.[1] This segment emphasizes integrated solutions that incorporate drilling, completions, pressure pumping, wellheads, trees, production processing, and pressure control technologies, aimed at reducing capital expenditures (CapEx), operating expenditures (OpEx), and greenhouse gas emissions.[47] Key offerings include wellhead and tree systems for containing and controlling reservoir fluids, production equipment such as separators for oil, gas, sand, and water; multiphase meters; pumps; chokes; valves; inline separators; and modular skids for processing.[48] Pressure control products feature proprietary technologies like Chiksan® swivel joints for high-pressure fluid handling, Weco® check valves for flow prevention, and pressure relief valves to safeguard systems.[49] The iComplete service integrates completion tools with production systems to enable efficient well interventions and reduce installation times.[47] Operations target diverse applications, including onshore conventional and unconventional fields, offshore shallow-water developments, and storage facilities, supported by a product application tool for customized system selection from wellhead to pipeline.[50] In the third quarter of 2025, Surface Technologies generated revenue of $328.1 million, a 3 percent increase from the prior quarter, driven by higher activity in pressure control and production segments, with operating profit rising 57.3 percent to $36.8 million.[51] The unit has secured long-term framework agreements, such as a 10-year contract in 2023 for surface equipment supply in the Middle East through a joint venture.[52] TechnipFMC advances this segment through digital and engineered innovations, including automated ecosystems for "zero surprise" execution and state-of-the-art pressure management to enhance field reliability and lifecycle performance.[53] These capabilities position Surface Technologies to address mature field revivals and efficiency demands in conventional energy markets, while exploring adaptations for emerging energy transitions.[47]Onshore and Offshore Project Delivery
TechnipFMC's Surface Technologies segment facilitates onshore project delivery by supplying engineered equipment and integrated services for well construction, completions, production, and processing in unconventional and conventional fields. This encompasses wellheads, trees, pumps, valves, and control systems, delivered through a value chain that includes front-end engineering, manufacturing, and field services to optimize lifecycle performance and reduce operational risks. The iComplete™ service, for instance, enables automated, single-trip completions for high-intensity hydraulic fracturing, accelerating deployment and minimizing downtime in onshore shale plays.[47][54] In the third quarter of 2025, Surface Technologies generated $328.1 million in revenue, reflecting increased onshore activity driven by demand for pressure control and production enhancement solutions.[55] Following the 2021 spin-off of its large-scale EPC capabilities to Technip Energies, TechnipFMC's onshore delivery emphasizes modular, technology-focused integrations rather than full-scale facility construction, prioritizing efficiency in upstream operations such as gas processing tie-ins and field development support.[7] This shift allows for targeted interventions, including digital twins and asset integrity services, to enhance recovery rates in mature onshore assets without the complexities of comprehensive plant builds.[1] Offshore project delivery is executed via the Subsea segment's iEPCI™ model, which integrates engineering, procurement, construction, and installation under a single contract to streamline subsea field developments from concept to first oil. This approach has been applied in deepwater projects, utilizing proprietary Subsea 2.0® standardized systems for trees, manifolds, and umbilicals, often installed by dedicated vessels like the Deep Blue. Notable examples include the 2023 contract for Shell's PowerNap development in the Gulf of Mexico, valued at over $500 million, encompassing subsea production systems and flowline installation at depths exceeding 2,000 meters; and completion of the Dover project in May 2025, delivering integrated subsea infrastructure two years after award.[40][56][57] In Q3 2025, Subsea revenue reached $2.32 billion, bolstered by iEPCI™ executions that reduced cycle times by up to 30% compared to traditional models.[58] These projects leverage TechnipFMC's fleet and fabrication expertise to mitigate execution risks in challenging environments like the Gulf of Mexico and Brazil's pre-salt basins.[59]Technological Innovations and Capabilities
Subsea 2.0 and Integrated Engineering
Subsea 2.0 is TechnipFMC's configurable product platform for subsea systems, featuring pre-engineered, standardized modular components designed to reduce project complexity, size, and weight while enabling faster delivery.[41] Introduced in April 2018 at the Offshore Technology Conference in Houston, the platform includes compact trees, manifolds, and integrated connectors that are approximately 50% smaller and lighter than traditional designs, facilitating easier installation and lower lifecycle costs.[60][61] Its configure-to-order model combines customized configurations with industrialized processes, shortening lead times by leveraging standardized parts for reliability and scalability.[62][63] The platform's adoption has accelerated due to its alignment with industry demands for cost efficiency in marginal fields, with TechnipFMC projecting that by late 2022, around half of subsea tree orders over the subsequent two years would utilize Subsea 2.0 equipment.[63] This standardization minimizes unique engineering variations, de-risking projects through proven components and modular assembly, which supports quicker first-oil timelines and improved field economics.[61] In practice, Subsea 2.0 integrates with broader subsea architectures, enhancing compatibility across production systems and enabling operators to tailor solutions without full custom redesigns.[39] Integrated engineering at TechnipFMC centers on its iEPCI™ model, an end-to-end approach encompassing engineering, procurement, construction, and installation of subsea systems, often incorporating Subsea 2.0 technologies to streamline execution.[64] This integrated framework covers design, custom tooling, manufacturing, fabrication, installation, and life-of-field services, allowing single-contractor accountability to reduce interfaces and interfaces risks in complex projects.[64] Notable applications include contracts with Equinor for high-pressure developments like the Åsgard field tieback and Johan Sverdrup Phase 3, where iEPCI facilitated subsea production systems following initial front-end engineering studies.[65][66] Recent expansions, such as a 2025 iEPCI award for Equinor's Heidrun extension and Shell's Gato do Mar project, demonstrate its scalability for brownfield tiebacks and deepwater installations.[67][68] By pairing Subsea 2.0's modular hardware with iEPCI's holistic project delivery, TechnipFMC achieves shortened cycle times and enhanced predictability, as evidenced in ongoing innovations targeting subsea revenue growth through these platforms.[69] This synergy supports operators in optimizing full-field developments, from upfront planning to sustained performance, amid volatile energy markets.[40]Advancements in Field Performance and Processing
TechnipFMC's field performance services utilize a data-driven methodology to enhance subsea asset integrity, thereby improving field uptime, production rates, and operational expenditure efficiency for operators.[70] These services integrate real-time monitoring and analytics to identify and mitigate performance bottlenecks, supporting sustained hydrocarbon recovery in mature fields.[71] The company's integrated Life of Field (iLOF™) offerings further advance performance through targeted production optimization, providing insights for asset life extension, proactive debottlenecking, and condition-based maintenance strategies that reduce unplanned downtime.[72] By leveraging predictive diagnostics and remote intervention capabilities, iLOF™ enables operators to extend subsea infrastructure viability, with applications demonstrated in brownfield optimizations where recovery factors have been increased by up to 10-15% in select deployments.[71] In subsea processing, TechnipFMC delivers separation, boosting, and compression systems designed for installation in both greenfield and brownfield environments, accelerating field startups and maximizing recoverable reserves through on-seabed hydrocarbon treatment.[42] These modular processing units, often combined with integrated Engineering, Procurement, Construction, and Installation (iEPCI™) contracts, enhance reservoir performance by reducing backpressure and enabling early production, as evidenced in projects achieving first oil within 24 months of sanction.[42] Digital innovations such as Subsea Studio™ represent a key advancement, offering an advanced platform that simulates and optimizes field development by incorporating TechnipFMC's proprietary engineering data for virtual prototyping and performance forecasting.[73] This tool facilitates rapid iteration of subsea architectures, minimizing physical prototyping costs and improving decision-making for complex fields. Recent collaborations underscore ongoing progress, including a June 2025 pilot with Petrobras for electric actuation technology, which supports all-electric subsea operations to eliminate hydraulic fluids, streamline field architectures, and boost reliability in high-pressure environments.[74] Similarly, a May 2025 agreement with Petrobras advances Hybrid Flexible Pipe (HFP) technology, enhancing flow assurance and reducing capex in deepwater processing by integrating dynamic risers with embedded monitoring for real-time performance adjustments.[75] These developments align with industry shifts toward electrification and digital integration, yielding measurable gains in field efficiency and lifecycle economics.Expansion into New Energy Applications
TechnipFMC established its New Energy Ventures unit in November 2021 to diversify beyond traditional oil and gas, targeting offshore applications in greenhouse gas removal, floating renewables, and hydrogen production and storage.[76] This initiative leverages the company's subsea engineering expertise to integrate renewable energy sources with hydrogen systems, as exemplified by the Deep Purple™ concept, which combines offshore wind power with electrolysis for hydrogen generation and subsea storage.[77] In hydrogen applications, TechnipFMC has pursued large-scale offshore storage projects, including participation in Norway's Hardanger Hydrogen Hub for cavern-based storage integrated with subsea infrastructure.[78] The company also collaborates on integrated solutions to enable blue and green hydrogen deployment, emphasizing modular subsea systems to reduce costs and emissions compared to onshore alternatives.[79] For greenhouse gas removal, TechnipFMC focuses on carbon capture, transportation, and storage (CCS), utilizing existing subsea equipment for CO2 handling. In March 2024, it secured a contract with the Northern Endurance Partnership to deliver the first all-electric integrated engineering, procurement, construction, and installation (iEPCI™) project for CCS off the UK coast, involving subsea tiebacks for CO2 injection; full notice to proceed followed in December 2024.[80] [81] This builds on proprietary technologies for safe CO2 sequestration, positioning the firm to support industrial-scale decarbonization.[82] In offshore floating renewables, TechnipFMC invested in and partnered with Orbital Marine Power in November 2021 to advance tidal stream energy through subsea integration and deployment services.[37] Additional efforts include collaborations for floating offshore wind, such as with Prysmian Group, adapting mooring and foundation technologies from oilfield applications to harness wind, wave, and tidal resources in deeper waters.[79] These ventures aim to exploit offshore sites unsuitable for fixed-bottom installations, though commercial scalability remains constrained by higher capital costs relative to mature onshore renewables.[77]Assets and Infrastructure
Engineering and Construction Fleet
TechnipFMC operates a fleet of 16 specialized vessels optimized for offshore engineering and construction tasks, including subsea infrastructure installation, pipelay, heavy-lift operations, and inspection, repair, and maintenance (IRM) activities. These assets enable the company to deliver integrated engineering, procurement, construction, and installation (iEPCI) services, providing clients with end-to-end control over complex deepwater projects worldwide.[1][83] The vessels feature dynamic positioning (DP) systems, remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), saturation diving capabilities, and cranes ranging from 250 to 650 tonnes, supporting operations in harsh environments like the North Sea and Brazilian pre-salt fields.[83] Key construction-focused vessels include the Deep Star, a DP2 vessel measuring 146 meters with a 550-tonne crane upgraded in 2020 and vertical lay system (VLS) capacity for heavy subsea equipment deployment up to 3000 meters water depth.[83] The Deep Orient, a 135.65-meter DP2 medium construction vessel capable of handling flexible pipes and umbilicals to 2300 meters, is equipped with two 3000-meter-rated ROVs and a 250-tonne crane for pipelay and installation projects.[83] Similarly, the Deep Arctic serves as a diving and heavy construction vessel tailored for North Sea conditions, featuring a 24-man diving chamber, ROVs, and pipelay support for rigid pipelines and IRM.[83] Diving and light construction are handled by vessels like the Deep Discoverer, a 121-meter DP3 unit built in 2017 with air and saturation diving systems for 18 personnel, a 250-tonne crane, and a 1000-meter-rated ROV, accommodating up to 120 crew for operations in deepwater environments.[83] The Deep Explorer, delivered in 2016, functions as a diving support vessel (DSV) with a large moonpool, 24-man diving setup, and capabilities for diverless construction, pipelay, and ROV-deployed interventions, supporting 150 personnel.[83] Several vessels support engineering and construction in high-demand regions through joint ventures, notably with DOF ASA for Brazilian offshore activities. Examples include the Skandi Africa, a DP3 harsh-environment construction vessel with an active heave compensator (AHC) crane and 650-meter tiltable lay system for subsea hardware installation; and the Skandi Açu, built in 2016 with a 650-tonne tower and 4000-tonne carousels for flexible pipelay and construction, each accommodating 120 personnel and two ROVs.[83] These partnerships enhance fleet flexibility, with vessels like the North Sea Atlantic incorporating emission-reduction technologies for sustainable umbilical and flexible pipelay operations via a 2000-tonne carousel.[83] The fleet's purpose-built design and regular maintenance ensure high utilization rates, as evidenced by secured contracts extending to 2030 for subsea construction and support.[84][83]Manufacturing and Fabrication Facilities
TechnipFMC maintains a global network of manufacturing and fabrication facilities focused on producing subsea production systems, umbilicals, flexible pipes, and surface equipment, with sites strategically positioned near major offshore basins to support integrated project delivery.[64] These facilities handle engineering, assembly, testing, and fabrication of components such as subsea trees, manifolds, risers, flowlines, and processing modules, enabling capabilities for high-pressure, deepwater environments up to 2,500 meters and 15,000 psi.[42] Umbilical manufacturing occurs at dedicated plants in Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom; Houston, Texas, United States; and Lobito, Angola, where customized steel tube, thermoplastic, and electrical umbilicals are produced for subsea control and power distribution.[85] Additional umbilical assembly capacity exists in Johor, Malaysia, supporting thermoplastic and electrical variants integrated with flexible pipe production.[86] Flexible pipe fabrication is centered at plants in Le Trait, France; Vitória and Açu, Brazil; and Johor, Malaysia (Asiaflex facility, established around 2010), producing multi-layered risers and flowlines for dynamic and static applications in harsh conditions.[87] [88] [89] Subsea production systems and hardware fabrication includes the Subsea 2.0 facility in Nusajaya, Malaysia, for standardized trees and manifolds, and a subsea production systems plant at 2660 Presidente Dutra Avenue, Pavuna, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[19] [90] Surface technologies manufacturing features the consolidated facility in Odessa, Texas, opened in 2017, for production equipment like separators, pumps, and skids.[91] A 18,950 square meter manufacturing site in Singapore supports regional subsea and umbilicals operations.[92] These assets incorporate advanced welding, spooling, and testing for rigid pipe and infrastructure components.[93]Financial Performance and Market Position
Revenue Trends and Segment Breakdown
TechnipFMC's revenue structure stabilized following the February 2021 spin-off of Technip Energies, which separated the company's engineering, procurement, and construction activities into a standalone entity, leaving TechnipFMC focused on two primary segments: Subsea, encompassing integrated subsea production systems, umbilicals, risers, flowlines, and services; and Surface Technologies, covering drilling, well completion, and production equipment for onshore and shallow-water applications.[94] Prior to the spin-off, total revenue in 2020 reached $8.35 billion, reflecting the broader portfolio including onshore/offshore projects, but post-spin-off figures from 2021 onward exclude these activities, with annual revenue at $6.40 billion that year amid market recovery from the COVID-19 downturn in oil demand.[95] From 2022 to 2024, total revenue grew steadily, increasing 4.6% to $6.70 billion in 2022, 16.8% to $7.82 billion in 2023, and 16.1% to $9.08 billion in 2024, driven primarily by Subsea segment expansion amid rising global upstream investments, higher oil prices, and demand for integrated engineering, procurement, construction, and installation (iEPCI) solutions in regions like the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, Guyana, and Angola.[94] [95] The Subsea segment, accounting for approximately 80-86% of total revenue in this period, benefited from technological advancements such as Subsea 2.0 standardized systems and long-term frame agreements, which enhanced project efficiency and backlog conversion.[94] In contrast, Surface Technologies exhibited more volatility, with growth tempered by regional declines in North America and Europe, exacerbated in 2024 by the March divestiture of the Measurement Solutions business, which reduced segment scale.[94]| Year | Total Revenue ($M) | Subsea Revenue ($M) | Surface Technologies Revenue ($M) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 6,700.4 | 5,461.2 | 1,239.2 |
| 2023 | 7,824.2 | 6,434.8 | 1,389.4 |
| 2024 | 9,083.3 | 7,819.9 | 1,263.4 |