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Non-Tech : The Brazil Board -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: kidl who wrote (1962)8/31/2019 1:17:09 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 
Some perspective.

The map shows where Brazil's economic activities are.

Now have a look at how our GDP is split: 76% Services: 18.5% Industry and Agriculture: 5.5%.

Brazil is an agriculture superpower but the sector is just a tiny 5.5% of GDP.

The important is the internal market. Exports are just 12.49 % of GDP and 1/3 of Brazil's trade is with the is Mercosur neighborhood.

What we really need is foreign Direct Investment and for that we need a leader who's not a 'cookie-cutter politician to put the house in order.




To: kidl who wrote (1962)9/14/2019 12:37:46 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 
US and Brazil agree to Amazon development

Brazil Foreign Minister Ernesto Araujo (L) and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo met on Friday The US and Brazil have agreed to promote private-sector development in the Amazon, during a meeting in Washington on Friday.

They also pledged a $100m (£80m) biodiversity conservation fund for the Amazon led by the private sector.

Brazil's foreign minister said opening the rainforest to economic development was the only way to protect it.

Ernesto Araujo also hit back at criticism of Brazil's handling of the forest fires.

He told reporters in Washington that claims the country is "not able to cope with the challenges" were false.

On Friday, Finland urged EU countries to consider stopping importing beef and soybeans from Brazil in order to put pressure on Brazil to tackle the fires.

Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro has faced criticism for failing to protect the region.

More than 80,000 fires have broken out in the Amazon rainforest so far this year.

Experts believe the majority of the fires across Brazil this year are caused by human activity such as farmers and loggers clearing land for crops or grazing.

Environmentalists will be sceptical



By Roger Harrabin, BBC Environment Analyst

Environmentalists will say this scheme is a ruse to open up the Amazon for mining, logging and farming.

When roads are driven into the forest it attracts more settlers, who clear land and hunt wildlife.

The land clearance - even on a quite small basis - leads to changed weather patterns, which harm the forest.

Environmentalists will argue the best way of saving the rainforest is to leave it in the hands of indigenous people.

Environmentalists say Mr Bolsonaro's policies have led to an increase in fires this year and that he has encouraged cattle farmers to clear large areas of the rainforest since his election last October.

Image copyright EPA Mr Araujo said: "We want to be together in the endeavour to create development for the Amazon region which we are convinced is the only way to protect the forest.

"So we need new initiatives, new productive initiatives, that create jobs, that create revenue for people in the Amazon and that's where our partnership with the United States will be very important for us."


"It's extremely upsetting... to see this kind of devastation" - the BBC's Will Grant flew over northern Rondonia state US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the biodiversity investment fund would support businesses in hard to reach areas of the Amazon.

He added: "The Brazilians and the American teams will follow through on our commitment that our presidents made in March. We're getting off the ground a 100 million dollar, 11-year Impact Investment Fund for Amazon biodiversity conservation and that project will be led by the private sector."

Last week seven South American countries agreed on measures to protect the Amazon river basin.

Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru and Suriname signed a pact, setting up a disaster response network and satellite monitoring.

At a summit in Colombia, they also agreed to work on reforestation.



To: kidl who wrote (1962)9/20/2019 12:04:36 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 

Exxon Is Back in Brazil -- and Betting Big on Deepwater Oil

“Brazil is basically the key oil play outside the U.S.,” says Cleveland Jones, a consultant and researcher at the National Institute of Oil and Gas in Rio de Janeiro. “If you have $5 billion, where are you going to invest it? Nigeria? Senegal? You have to allocate investment according to potential.”
The mammoth energy company is sticking with fossil fuels.


By and

September 20, 2019, 12:00 PM GMT+3




In November 2010, Exxon Mobil Corp. dispatched workers to a platform off the coast of Brazil, hoping to strike oil in one of the energy industry’s most anticipated drilling programs. About 2,300 meters (1.4 miles) below the surface, they bored into the seafloor, drilling down more than 2 miles over the course of almost two months before coming up dry. It was Exxon’s third dry hole in the area in just over two years. Defeated, the company abandoned exploration in Brazil. Now, seeing the success others are having there—and running into trouble elsewhere—Exxon’s back.

In an industry shifting toward renewables, Exxon is betting on Brazil as part of a $200 billion, seven-year capital-spending plan that’s remarkably large and focused on fossil fuels. A string of setbacks with projects in Canada, Russia, and the U.S. pushed the company to return to Latin America’s top oil-producing nation as it seeks to revive years of stagnating production. Brazil is the least developed among Exxon’s major projects—which also include Guyana, the U.S. Permian Basin, and gas terminals in Mozambique and Papua New Guinea—but it offers the most substantial potential prize: The country’s deep waters are the site of the largest offshore oil find this century.

“Brazil is basically the key oil play outside the U.S.,” says Cleveland Jones, a consultant and researcher at the National Institute of Oil and Gas in Rio de Janeiro. “If you have $5 billion, where are you going to invest it? Nigeria? Senegal? You have to allocate investment according to potential.”

There are more than 100 billion barrels of recoverable oil trapped under a layer of salt in deep Brazilian waters, according to a study by the State University of Rio de Janeiro, or UERJ. The 2006 discovery of the reserve kicked off foreign interest in Brazil’s energy industry, long dominated by state-owned Petrobras. The area has produced some of the world’s top oil wells, gushing upwards of 60,000 barrels a day. That surpasses output in the North Sea and Gulf of Mexico and rivals the most productive wells in Saudi Arabia and the Caspian Sea.



Brazil also has provided one of the most stable environments for oil companies, despite the nation’s frequent political turmoil. The country respected oil contracts even when it was governed by the left-wing Workers’ Party, and President Jair Bolsonaro has promised to open the industry further to outside investment. Other parts of the world with giant oil reserves aren’t always so welcoming. In Saudi Arabia, where drone attacks struck key oil installations on Sept. 14, the industry is dominated by the national oil company, and it’s a similar picture across much of the Middle East. Russia and Venezuela are walled off by strict U.S. sanctions, and exploration on Africa’s west coast is hampered by corruption, theft, and tough fiscal terms from governments.



European rivals Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Galp Energia SGPS SA bought up Brazilian acreage as far back as 2000 and drilled successfully for oil—Brazil has become a major profit driver for Shell. Exxon is making up for lost time: In the past two years it’s spent 6.8 billion reais ($1.7 billion) on exploration rights, making it the top leaseholder after Petrobras.

Exxon has had to get reacquainted with the oil industry in Brazil since its return, including the hired hands that operate rigs, mix cement and do the seismic, 3D imaging and soil sample tests essential to narrowing down geological targets before drilling begins. The company is preparing for exploration drilling next year in the area it operates, spokesman Todd Spitler says. “Brazil is the most important new conventional oil play for the exploration industry in the past decade and is a key investment in Exxon Mobil’s future,” he says.

Investors are sure to have questions about the new program. Exxon’s $30 billion a year in capital spending focused on oil and gas stands out as exceptionally large in a world awash in crude. Rival companies have shrunk their budgets and are returning cash to investors through share buybacks. Not Exxon. Its annual budget, which will rise to as much as $35 billion in the early 2020s, is comparable to 2013 and 2014 levels, when oil was trading at more than $100 a barrel. Crude trades for well under $70 a barrel, and that’s after the boost from the drone attacks.

While some rivals have gone cold on exploration in favor of investment in renewables, Exxon is standing firm as the model of a traditional energy company, with oil and gas at the heart of Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods’s business plan. He’s seeking to gain an advantage by building major projects while others retreat and claims to have the best set of opportunities available to him since the merger of Exxon and Mobil in 1999.

Exxon is “investing aggressively when other companies are not,” says Mark Stoeckle, who manages about $2.4 billion including Exxon shares at Adams Funds in Boston. The returns on Brazil are far into the future, in the mid-2020s at the earliest, he says. “This does have risk, there’s no doubt about it. But Brazil fits well: They can invest at scale in a multi­decade resource that they really need.”

Guyana, one of Brazil’s northern neighbors, proves how lucrative such exploration can be. Exxon has discovered more than 6 billion barrels of low-cost oil there since 2015 and is building production platforms estimated by energy consultant Wood Mackenzie Ltd. to be the most profitable of all deep-water projects by major oil companies. Guyana and Brazil are now among the top five destinations for oil exploration globally, according to Wood Mackenzie.

“When you’re talking about Brazil, you’re talking about the most exclusive club of deep-water producers, and Exxon wants to be a part of that,” says Schreiner Parker, vice president for Latin America at consultant Rystad Energy. “Where they decide to put their economic weight they could make a very big splash, even in a market that has attracted all of the big players, like Brazilian offshore.”


BOTTOM LINE - Exxon needs to find large sources of oil that can deliver reliable production over decades. Brazil may be its best bet.



To: kidl who wrote (1962)9/27/2019 12:48:54 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 
Brazil’s Huge $25 Billion Oil Auction Clears Very Important Hurdle


The auction will seek to sell oil blocks in the presalt zone off the coast of Brazil that had originally been given to state-run Petrobras to take 5 billion barrels of oil from those fields. Now, international oil companies will be able to bid on the production rigs in this same area.


By Julianne Geiger - Sep 27, 2019, 3:00 AM CDT

Brazil’s massive transfer-of-rights oil auction to be held on November 7 has cleared one hurdle as the Brazilian Congress approved on Thursday one section of a larger bill that determines the specifics of the $25 billion auction, Reuters reported. The remaining sections of the bill still need to be settled.

The one section that was approved today deals with revenue sharing for the auction proceeds, but remaining elements of the bill will still need to be approved—for now the elements in the unapproved sections have yet to be agreed.

The section that was approved will now become law.

Brazil’s auction is expected to rake in 106 billion reais, or $25.5 billion for the government.

The auction will seek to sell oil blocks in the presalt zone off the coast of Brazil that had originally been given to state-run Petrobras to take 5 billion barrels of oil from those fields. Now, international oil companies will be able to bid on the production rigs in this same area.

Petrobras has already done a fair bit of exploring in the area, and Brazil is hoping that this will factor into getting a premium price for the transfer of rights in that acreage.

Petrobras made it clear on Thursday in its updated strategic plan that it is committed to deepwater oil and gas projects, shedding its earlier persona as an energy company that would “evolve with society” through solar and wind projects as part of its Business and Management Plan. Petrobras Chief Executive Roberto Castello Branco has called other oil majors who are planning to diversify into renewables as mere “marketing ploys” Reuters reported.

Brazil is home to billions in oil reserves, about 90% of which lie offshore in deep waters.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com



To: kidl who wrote (1962)10/29/2019 6:44:45 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 
Big Oil seeks refuge in Brazil from Latam regional turmoil

Next week could cement Brazil’s ascendance, as 14 companies — a who’s who of oil majors — will bid on Nov. 6 in Brazil’s so-called transfer-of-rights (TOR) auction. Fixed signing bonuses total 106.5 billion reais ($26.4 billion).


RIO DE JANEIRO/MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - When executives arrive in Rio de Janeiro this week for Brazil’s biennial Offshore Technology Conference, they will find themselves in Latin America’s most promising market for Big Oil by far.

FILE PHOTO: A general view shows Mexican state oil firm Pemex's Cadereyta refinery, in Cadereyta, Mexico October 5, 2019. REUTERS/Daniel Becerril

That marks a dramatic change from only a year ago.

In early October 2018, Brazil’s current president, Jair Bolsonaro, was in a tight electoral race with Fernando Haddad of the leftist Workers’ Party. Global executives feared a Haddad victory would reverse recent pushes to provide them an opening in Brazil’s oil industry, which for years had been dominated by state-run Petroleo Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras.

Elsewhere in the region, Brazil at the time had fierce competition in the race to attract capital.

Business-friendly governments in Argentina and Ecuador were auctioning exploration blocks and working to lure foreign oil companies.

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In Mexico, leftist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador had not yet taken office, and investors were still benefiting from free-market reforms that had opened up access to prized oilfields in the Gulf of Mexico.

In the last year, many of those competitors have effectively taken themselves out of the game.

Lopez Obrador, widely known as AMLO, halted a liberalization of Mexico’s energy market. Protests and economic crises have undercut Argentina and Ecuador’s would-be reformers.

By contrast, Bolsonaro has made dramatic strides toward expanding global energy firms’ role in Brazil — with over a dozen bidders in back-to-back oil auctions next week expected to fetch around $28 billion in signing bonuses.

Some companies have said the terms look expensive.

But with fewer material options on the table, the world’s oil heavyweights are likely to pony up.

“These are different markets, but the trend when you look at everything that’s going on, is that Brazil is held in high regard,” said oil and gas specialist Alexandre Calmon, a partner at law firm Tauil & Chequer.

BOLSONARO VS AMLOBeyond the billions of barrels of oil becoming available off its coast, Brazil’s new government has also been a beacon for foreign investment in the energy sector.

The previous government, under former President Michel Temer, had already taken key steps to open up Brazil’s energy market, easing restrictions on equipment imports and creating a schedule for oil auctions, among other measures.

Since taking office in January, right-wing President Bolsonaro has doubled down, tapping free-market advocates to run the Economy Ministry and Petrobras.

Slideshow (4 Images)

They have overseen billions of dollars in asset sales, working to dismantle state control of fuel refining and distribution while opening former Petrobras fields to new players.

In Mexico, AMLO has suspended scheduled auctions and is focusing the strategy to boost output on contracts to oil service firms in which Pemex maintains firm control over oilfields.

Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno has been weakened by protests. On Sunday, Argentines voted President Mauricio Macri out, returning leftists to power who have previously urged the nationalization of energy assets.

“The Brazilians have been very disciplined even after the government change. Petrobras ... has finally shown a coherent divestiture program,” said Gonzalo Monroy, a Mexico-based energy analyst. “Mexico not only fell behind, it also changed its vision on the industry.”

Next week could cement Brazil’s ascendance, as 14 companies — a who’s who of oil majors — will bid on Nov. 6 in Brazil’s so-called transfer-of-rights (TOR) auction. Fixed signing bonuses total 106.5 billion reais ($26.4 billion).

The TOR area, which will be auctioned off in four pieces, is considered a rare prize, as it is already known to hold billions of barrels of untapped crude.

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Still, others are warning that investors’ appetites are not without limits. Executives at BP PLC and Portugal’s Galp Energia SGPS SA have said that Brazil’s oil rounds are getting expensive.

In an interview last week, Equinor’s Brazil chief warned that Brazil was competing with countries all over the world - not just Latin America - for big oil’s attention.

(For a graphic on Brazil's upcoming TOR auction: here)



To: kidl who wrote (1962)11/5/2019 10:14:39 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 
What a Mammoth Oil Auction Means for Brazil’s Economy
BY NAKI MENDOZA | NOVEMBER 5, 2019
A pre-salt auction 20 years in the making could have broad repercussions for the economy and Jair Bolsonaro’s government.
americasquarterly.org



To: kidl who wrote (1962)11/25/2019 1:03:11 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 
Petrobras is on track to become the world’s largest oil producer among publicly listed companies by 2030, according to Rystad Energy.


Message 32433983



To: kidl who wrote (1962)3/22/2020 8:58:53 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 2508
 
Petrobras cuts Brazil gasoline prices by near 10%; sugar prices tumble

Platts has already cut its 2020 ethanol consumption estimate for Brazil by 2.4%, estimating 40% of sugar cane will be used for producing the sweetener rather than fuel. It has increased the gasoline demand forecast by 7.5%.

Marta Nogueira, Marcelo Teixeira

RIO DE JANEIRO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Brazil’s state-controlled oil company Petrobras cut gasoline prices at refineries in the country by almost 10% on Thursday, the first cut since this week’s oil price collapse, a move that could boost sugar production and reduce ethanol output.

The oil company, which has a near refining monopoly in Brazil, reduced gasoline prices by 0.16 real per liter, or 9.5%, and also cut diesel prices by 0.125 real per liter, or 6.5%.

This move makes retail gasoline more competitive against ethanol, possibly cutting the biofuel’s demand and prompting mills to switch production to sugar instead, said Claudiu Covrig, a sugar analyst at S&P Global Platts.

Gasoline and ethanol compete for driver preference at pumps, since most cars in Brazil can run on both fuels.

Ethanol demand grew strongly in the last two years due to its price advantage over gasoline. That led local mills to produce more of the biofuel and less sugar, a trend that could change now.

Platts has already cut its 2020 ethanol consumption estimate for Brazil by 2.4%, estimating 40% of sugar cane will be used for producing the sweetener rather than fuel. It has increased the gasoline demand forecast by 7.5%.

“But if sugar mix advances to 42%, adding about 1.6 million tonnes of sugar to the market, or to 44%, adding 3.2 million tonnes of sugar, we shall cut hydrous demand more,” Covrig said.

Petrobras’s gasoline price cut, although large, is still far from the drop in prices for gasoline in the United States. U.S. gasoline futures sank to as low as $0.8536 a gallon on Thursday, a nearly 20% fall from Monday’s low of $1.0574 a gallon, Refinitiv Eikon data showed.

Raw sugar prices in New York extended losses after the news, falling more than 5% and reaching a session low of 11.53 cents per pound. Futures pared some of the losses later.

Brazil has taken almost 20 million tonnes of sugar out of the global market in the last two seasons by producing much more ethanol, helping erase a global surplus.

Reporting by Marta Nogueira; writing by Marcelo Teixeira; Editing by Tom Brown and Marguerita Choy

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.