
Gulf of Suez Petroleum Company (GUPCO) has commenced production from the Al-Wasl-4 development well at the North Safa Field, marking a further boost t crude oil output from one of the Gulf of Suez region’s most important recent offshore discoveries.
The well, drilled from the field’s offshore production platform, has an initial production rate of around 2,250 barrels of crude oil per day, alongside approximately 1.3mn cubic feet of gas per day. As a result, GUPCO’s total crude oil production has risen to roughly 65,000 barrels per day, strengthening Egypt’s upstream output from mature offshore assets.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, Egypt’s Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources said the start-up reflects GUPCO’s ongoing strategy to maximise value from its asset base through an integrated development approach. This includes drilling new exploratory and development wells, re-evaluating geological structures and leveraging remaining potential within mature producing fields.
The Al-Wasl-4 well is among the flagship projects within GUPCO’s 2026 development plan, having been prioritised following encouraging technical and geological studies. According to the ministry, these assessments confirmed the commercial viability of the well and its role in sustaining and expanding production from the North Safa Field.
North Safa is regarded as one of the most significant offshore discoveries in the Gulf of Suez in recent years. Commercial production from the field began in 2024 after GUPCO completed a major development programme that included the installation of a new offshore production platform and the laying and connection of subsea production pipelines. The project was executed in line with stringent occupational safety, health and environmental protection standards, the ministry added.
Alongside bringing new wells on stream, GUPCO is also advancing an integrated reservoir pressure maintenance programme designed to support long-term production sustainability. The programme involves water injection across three wells, aimed at maintaining reservoir pressure, optimising recovery rates and enhancing overall production efficiency.
Preparations are already under way for the second phase of development at North Safa, with reservoir performance data from current operations expected to inform future drilling and production plans. The ministry noted that the company’s focus remains on balancing short-term production gains with long-term field management, particularly in offshore environments where maximising recovery from existing infrastructure is critical.
The latest production milestone underscores the continued importance of the Gulf of Suez as a core oil-producing region, even as operators increasingly rely on advanced studies and targeted development to unlock additional value from established fields.