Drought Leads Brazil to Increase Bolivian Gas Imports to Maximum Capacity

Gas from Bolivia Persistent drought in the South is forcing Brazil to increase the amount of natural gas it will import from Bolivia later this month to bring on stream several thermoelectric power plants that had been inactive, according to Brazilian government controlled gas and oil multinational Petrobras.

According to Petrobras' director of gas and energy, Graça Foster, Brazilian imports of Bolivian gas once again will climb to 30 million cubic meters per day – the maximum capacity of the gas pipeline linking the two countries – in approximately two weeks.

At present, due to lower demand resulting from the global economic crisis and because heavy rainfall had allowed Brazil to produce more hydroelectricity, Brazilian imports of Bolivian gas have fallen to 24 million cubic meters per day.

Petrobras initially had reduced imports to close to 19 million cubic meters per day, but the two countries subsequently reached an agreement to raise the volume of the shipments to avoid excessive economic harm to Bolivia.

The impoverished, landlocked nation in recent months also has been forced to lower the price of its gas exports, its main source of foreign currency.

According to Foster, because heavy rains in the first few months of the year allowed hydroelectric plants in the southern part of the country to operate at full capacity, plants producing more expensive thermoelectricity were temporarily shut down.

But a recent drought has lowered water levels at hydroelectric dams, making it necessary for Brazil to compensate by raising thermoelectric output to about 2,200 megawatts beginning next week.

To do so, the country will need an additional 14 million cubic meters of natural gas per day, part of which will come from Bolivia and another portion from increased gas production in the offshore Campos Basin.

Foster added that, in the event more gas is needed, Petrobras has the option of increasing imports of liquefied natural gas now that it has brought online two LNG processing plants in recent months.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian author and actor Gianfrancesco Guarnieri

Brazil Says Farewell to the Man Who Tricked the Generals with Allegories

Gianfrancesco Guarnieri, the man who for ever changed the direction of the Brazilian theater ...

Brazil President Asks for More Democratic International System in BRICS meeting

The president of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, defended today, in New Delhi, India, reforms in ...

Rapidinhas

Behavior All Naked   Candidate Fagotti went naked on TV Getting naked in Brazil ...

Brazil Tries to Show the Positive Side of a Weak Dollar

The executive secretary of Brazil’s Ministry of Development, Industry, and Foreign Trade, Márcio Fortes ...

Brazil’s Middle East Trade Tour Leaves Brazilian Businessmen Happy

Brazilian company Tissot, a manufacturer of high-end furniture, should get an order from a ...

Brazil Backpedals and Denies Reprisal Against Argentina

The Brazilian government denied it was thinking on reprisals against Argentina because of the ...

Brazilian Exports to Arabs Grow 25% in Year

Brazilian exports to the 22 countries in the League of Arab States grew 8% ...

In Tourism Brazil Ranks 49 to Switzerland’s 1st Place

Brazil, in 49th place, is the Mercosur (Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay) country best ranked ...

One-Note Thought

I heard more than I saw, I bended my knees and almost on all ...

Brazil: Too Tense for Comfort

Several moderate politicians and the press have criticized the overly lenient attitude of Brazilian ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`