Italian energy major has set out an ambitious five-year strategy aimed at boosting production, expanding its energy transition portfolio, and significantly increasing shareholder returns through stronger cash generation and lower leverage.

At the core of the plan is a dual-track growth model: scaling its oil and gas portfolio while accelerating standalone transition businesses such as Plenitude and Enilive. Eni expects to generate more than €40 billion in free cash flow between 2026 and 2030, enabling higher dividends and share buybacks alongside continued investment.

Eni is doubling down on its exploration and production (E&P) segment, describing its current project pipeline as the strongest in its history. The company expects production to grow at an annual rate of 3–4% through 2030, supported by a diversified portfolio spanning Africa, the Eastern Mediterranean, Southeast Asia, and Norway.

New project approvals—including developments in Indonesia’s North Kutei Basin and a planned LNG project in Argentina—highlight Eni’s continued focus on gas monetization and LNG markets. The company also emphasized its leadership in floating LNG (FLNG), a technology gaining traction as operators seek flexible, lower-cost export solutions.

Since 2014, Eni has discovered more than 11 billion barrels of oil equivalent and converted 60% of those discoveries into production or asset sales—underscoring a capital-efficient exploration model that continues to differentiate it from peers.

Alongside hydrocarbons, Eni is expanding its energy transition platforms through Plenitude (renewables and retail) and Enilive (biofuels).

Plenitude is targeting 15 GW of installed renewable capacity by 2030, up from 5.8 GW at the end of 2025, while growing its customer base to more than 11 million. A planned deconsolidation and €1.5 billion capital increase is designed to accelerate growth while unlocking shareholder value.

Enilive, meanwhile, is scaling biofuel production capacity to 5 million tonnes annually by 2030, with sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) expected to play a growing role. EBITDA from the segment is forecast to triple to €3 billion over the period.

Together, the transition businesses have already attracted external investment valuing them at more than €23 billion, reinforcing Eni’s “satellite” model of partially divested, self-funding subsidiaries.

Eni’s financial framework underpins the entire plan. The company expects cash flow from operations to reach approximately €17 billion by 2030, representing a 14% compound annual growth rate on a per-share basis.

Capital discipline remains a priority, with annual investments reduced to below €6 billion—down from previous plans—while gearing is expected to remain in a historically low range of 10–15%.

This improved financial outlook supports enhanced shareholder distributions. Eni has raised its payout target to 35–45% of cash flow and announced a proposed 2026 dividend of €1.10 per share alongside a €1.5 billion share buyback program.

Notably, the company will increase distributions in high-price environments, committing to return 100% of incremental cash flow via extraordinary dividends if oil prices exceed $90 per barrel.

Eni’s strategy reflects a broader trend among European oil majors balancing hydrocarbon investment with energy transition initiatives. While companies like BP and Shell have recalibrated transition ambitions amid weaker returns, Eni continues to pursue a hybrid model—leveraging upstream cash flows to fund lower-carbon growth.

Its satellite structure, which allows partial monetization of transition assets while retaining operational control, has emerged as a distinctive approach in the sector, offering both capital flexibility and valuation transparency.

At the same time, the company’s continued emphasis on LNG and gas aligns with growing global demand for lower-carbon fossil fuels, particularly in Asia and emerging markets.

With a strengthened upstream pipeline, expanding transition businesses, and a disciplined financial framework, Eni is positioning itself for resilient growth through the end of the decade—while offering investors increased exposure to both traditional energy and emerging low-carbon markets.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

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