China Will Finance Brazil’s Deep-Sea Oil Extraction

Petrobras offshore platform The Brazilian government signed an agreement to supply China with 100,000 to 160,000 barrels of oil per day at market prices in exchange for a loan from the China Development Bank to help develop its huge oil reserves.

The agreement signed Thursday and which will take effect immediately, was announced at Brazil's foreign ministry after Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva met with Vice President Xi Jinping in the capital city of Brasí­lia.

Brazil's government controlled oil and gas multinational Petrobras signed a memorandum of understanding to secure long-term financing from the Chinese Development Bank and hopes to begin receiving funds as early as May. The funds are to help extract massive, newly found oil reserves deep beneath the ocean floor off Brazil's southern coast.

"We'll settle it by the time president Lula visits China in May," Petrobras CEO José Sérgio Gabrielli told reporters after meeting with Chinese officials.

The understanding confirms the interest of both countries: Brazil needs funds to develop the new fields and China is determined to ensure long term supplies of natural resources such as oil, minerals and agriculture commodities.

This is the purpose of Vice-president Xi Latinamerican tour which so far has included Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela and now Brazil.

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim hailed the deals as proof of growing cooperation between two large emerging markets. "This is the most important South-South relationship," he underlined.

On Tuesday, China Development Bank signed a US$ 25 billion financial deal with Russia's state oil champion Rosneft and pipeline monopoly Transneft in exchange for oil from the huge new East Siberian fields for the next two decades.

Petrobras is to supply the oil to China's government owned Sinopec. Brazil has discovered high grade light oil and natural gas deposits in the Santos Basin, and further south which is estimated to hold 60 billion barrels of oil.

CEO Gabrielli recently announced a five-year investment developing plan totaling US$ 175 billion.

Brazil has been talking with China about the loan since last year. The company has been seeking alternatives to international bank lending and bonds to finance its spending plan in the face of an international credit crunch.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Can Count Now on Its Independent Newsmen

The Brazilian large press celebrated with confetti and serpentine the shelving of project CFJ (Federal ...

Dirt Flies as Brazilian Parties Aim for Presidency

In early October I was talking to someone closely involved with the São Paulo ...

Tender Brazil: a Government Subsidy to Help 16 Million Living in Abject Poverty

This is no austerity program. Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff went on television and radio ...

WTO Hints Brazil and Friends Are Holding Hong Kong’s Meeting Hostage

The European trade commissioner, Peter Mandelson, said today, that everyone must leave Hong Kong ...

Mass Killings by Drug Gang Don’t Worry Brazilian Investors

Latin American stocks tumbled as investors continued to take profits amid worries about rising ...

Who’s in Charge in Haiti? Brazil or the US?

Since Haiti’s earthquake there has been some confusion about exactly who is in charge ...

In Brazil, Police Are Bandit, But Also Victim

Fourteen-year-old schoolboy Douglas Brasil de Paula was playing pinball in a bar. João da ...

December 1994

CONTENTS: Cover story: The army goes up the hill in Rio (p. 8) Adjusting ...

Lula Dismisses General Opposed to His Truth Commission

Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, signed last night the dismissal of General ...

Brazil’s Cinta Larga Indians and Miners: A Bloody Relationship

The Roosevelt Reservation in Brazil, home to the Wide Belt (“Cinta Larga”) Indians, has ...