PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 1851558
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 1851558
The Oil And Gas CAPEX Market size is estimated at USD 654.14 billion in 2025, and is expected to reach USD 799.11 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 4.08% during the forecast period (2025-2030).

Operators funnel capital toward high-return projects that protect cash flows during volatile price cycles while positioning portfolios for a multi-decade energy transition. Deepwater, LNG, and brownfield decarbonization programs dominate the spending slate because they combine competitive economics with strategic relevance. Tight discipline on full-cycle break-evens prompts faster final investment decisions (FIDs) and a visible shift from frontier exploration to development drilling. Consolidation among integrated majors and national oil companies (NOCs) unlocks scale efficiencies, while digital technologies trim project overruns and lower operating costs. Strategic finance remains a watchpoint as ESG-linked covenants tighten access to debt and raise the hurdle rate for green-light decisions.
Long-term offtake contracts and structurally tight gas balances have catalyzed LNG megaprojects such as Woodside's USD 17.5 billion Louisiana facility and the Corpus Christi Stage 3 expansion. Developers are extending spend beyond liquefaction into processing, pipelines, and storage, creating multiplier effects throughout the oil and gas capex market. First-mover positions in regions with stranded gas-illustrated by NextDecade's Rio Grande LNG offtake with Saudi Aramco-are projected to lock in decades of free cash flow.
Cost deflation in subsea kit and standardized project models has dropped deepwater breakevens below USD 50 per barrel, pushing projects like BP's USD 5 billion Kaskida and TotalEnergies' USD 6 billion Kaminho to sanction. Therefore, the oil and gas capex market sees robust order books for specialized rigs, SURF and FPSO contractors, with 2025 offshore EPC opportunities estimated at USD 54 billion.
Brent's USD 68-93 range in 2024 masked sharp intraday swings that complicate NPV calculations for projects with 7-10 year paybacks. Lenders have responded by raising hurdle rates and tightening stress-test scenarios, effectively screening out marginal oil and gas capex market opportunities. Citi's forecast of prices potentially dropping into the USD 60s by 2025 further discourages long-cycle commitments.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Upstream activities command 72.92% of the oil and gas capex market share in 2024, benefiting from a 4.20% CAGR forecast through 2030 as operators accelerate final investment decisions on high-return deepwater and unconventional projects. The sector's growth momentum reflects strategic repositioning toward short-cycle developments that adapt quickly to commodity price fluctuations while maintaining competitive returns. Major upstream investments include BP's USD 5 billion Kaskida project and Chevron's Future Growth Project at Tengiz, which commenced production in January 2025 with the capacity to increase output by 260,000 barrels per day. Midstream operations focus on critical infrastructure bottlenecks, particularly LNG processing and pipeline capacity expansions that enable upstream production growth. With companies prioritizing maintenance CAPEX over capacity additions, downstream investments remain constrained by margin pressures and uncertain long-term demand projections.
Digital transformation reshapes upstream project execution through AI-enabled drilling optimization and predictive maintenance systems that reduce operational costs and improve recovery rates. SLB's major AI-enabled deepwater drilling contract demonstrates how technology adoption is becoming essential for competitive positioning in complex reservoir developments. The upstream sector's CAPEX allocation increasingly emphasizes production optimization over exploration, reflecting lessons learned from previous cycles where discovery-focused strategies generated insufficient returns. Companies leverage advanced seismic imaging and reservoir modeling to maximize output from existing fields rather than pursuing speculative exploration programs. This production-centric approach aligns with investor demands for capital discipline and near-term cash flow generation while maintaining long-term reserve replacement ratios.
The Oil and Gas CAPEX Market Report is Segmented by Sector (Upstream, Midstream, and Downstream), Location (Onshore and Offshore), Asset Type (Exploration, Development and Production, Maintenance and Turn-Around, and Decommissioning), and Geography (North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, South America, and Middle East and Africa). The Market Sizes and Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Asia-Pacific emerges as the largest (29% of the market share in 2024) and the fastest-growing regional oil and gas capex market with 4.86% CAGR through 2030, reflecting energy security imperatives and substantial NOC investment programs designed to reduce import dependence and capture domestic market growth. PTTEP's USD 5.3 billion CAPEX plan for 2025 demonstrates how regional operators prioritize upstream gas development and LNG supply chain investments to serve domestic consumption and export opportunities. The region's growth momentum is supported by rising electricity demand driven by economic development and data center expansion, with companies like Chevron establishing major engineering centers in India to capture cost advantages and local market opportunities. Chinese and Indian NOCs are accelerating domestic exploration and development programs while pursuing international acquisitions that secure long-term resource access. However, regional operators face increasing financing challenges as international banks implement ESG-linked lending restrictions. APAC oil and gas firms generate 96% of revenues from fossil fuel activities compared to more diversified global peers.
North American and European markets are experiencing divergent trends, with North America benefiting from shale production optimization and LNG export infrastructure development while Europe focuses increasingly on maintenance CAPEX and decarbonization projects. North American operators like Devon Energy and EOG Resources demonstrate exceptional capital discipline. Devon generated USD 1 billion in free cash flow during Q1 2025 while reducing CAPEX guidance by USD 100 million, investing.com. Though companies continue to invest in existing operations and carbon capture technologies, European investments are constrained by regulatory pressures and renewable energy policies that discourage new fossil fuel development. The regional divergence reflects different regulatory environments and resource endowments, with North American shale providing flexibility to adjust production levels based on commodity prices while European operators navigate more restrictive policy frameworks. South American markets remain focused on deepwater developments and infrastructure projects that can serve domestic energy security needs and export market opportunities, though political stability and regulatory consistency continue to influence international operator participation levels.
Middle East and Africa market is driven by abundant low-cost reserves and supportive government policies that encourage domestic and international development. The region benefits from production costs often below USD 20 per barrel and established infrastructure networks that reduce development timelines and CAPEX requirements compared to frontier regions. Saudi Aramco and other regional NOCs are implementing substantial upstream expansion programs while investing in downstream integration and petrochemical facilities that capture higher value-added margins throughout the hydrocarbon value chain. ExxonMobil's planned USD 1.5 billion deepwater investment in Nigeria exemplifies how international operators prioritize the region despite global energy transition pressures. The region's CAPEX growth is supported by long-term supply contracts with Asian buyers and strategic positioning for anticipated global supply tightness during the energy transition period. However, operators must navigate evolving ESG expectations and potential demand destruction in traditional export markets as renewable energy adoption accelerates.