Energy and marine engineering firm Seatrium doubled its net profit last year as a global energy boom picked up steam.Ā 

The firm, No. 42 on the Southeast Asia 500, reported a net profit of 323.6 million Singapore dollars ($256.3 million) for 2025, a 106% increase from the year before. Revenue also grew by 24% to 11.5 billion Singapore dollars ($9.1 billion), largely due to growth in its oil and gas and offshore wind businesses, which grew by 24% and 60% respectively. Yet revenue from ship repairs and upgrades fell by 25%, which Seatrium blamed on ā€œtrade-related uncertainties.ā€

Seatrium shares rose by 3.6% after the release of the earnings.Ā 

The Singapore firm’s strong performance comes amid a swell in global energy demand, thanks to energy-intensive technologies like AI and electric vehicles, as well as the rapid industrialization of emerging economies. Global power demand is set to grow by an average of 3.5% per year through 2030, according to the International Energy Agency.

Seatrium is a relatively new company, born from the 2023 merger of two Singaporean offshore heavyweights, Sembcorp Marine and Keppel Offshore & Marine. CFO Stephen Lu noted that the new entity was getting significant cost savings from economies of scale.Ā 

ā€œFrom the moment the two companies came together, we looked at our cost items, line by line, removing what we didn’t need and leveraging our combined scale for economic benefits,ā€ Lu said. ā€œThese changes have fundamentally reduced our cost levels and will continue to have a lasting impact.ā€

Seatrium has over 32 billion Singapore dollars ($25.3 billion) in potential contracts over the next 24 months. This includes 23 billion Singapore dollars in oil and gas deals, driven mainly by the Americas; and 7 billion Singapore dollars in offshore wind deals.

ā€œOur ability to win these projects reflect the strong trust customers place in us across conventional energy and renewables,ā€ Chris Ong, Seatrium’s CEO, said. ā€œAmidst a tough macro environment, we secured… new orders supported by returning customers and new partnerships.ā€Ā 

One Seatrium project is the construction of offshore substations for Empire Wind, a major offshore wind project off the coast of the U.S. states of New York and New Jersey. The project is now 97% complete, and slated to be finished this year. ā€œOnce operational, it will deliver 810 MWs of clean energy to New York, enough power to power more than 500,000 homes,ā€ Ong said.

The Trump administration had tried to halt construction of the $5 billion project several times, citing national security risks and a rushed approval process. Work resumed last month, after a federal judge issued a temporary injunction on Jan. 12, overturning Trump’s order.Ā 

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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