Brazil to Change Rules to Get More Control of Oil Reserves

Brazilian oil Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will present a bill aimed at increasing government control of offshore oil reserves to Congress in July before an annual legislative holiday. However the existing oil exploration rights which have been sold under the current auction system will not be changed with the new proposals.

Under the proposed new law, Brazil will divide oil output with companies that agree to develop blocks and give Brazil's government a share of production, Development Minister Paulo Bernardo said in an interview in Londrina, Brazil. The company that offers the biggest share of output at auction will win the right to develop the area.

Lula asked his top ministers to review the country's system of leasing oil exploration blocks to the highest bidder after the November 2007 announcement of Tupi, a 5 billion to 8 billion barrel offshore field that is the largest discovery in the Americas in three decades.

"We've already met with Lula and given him our proposals," said Bernardo, a member of the committee advising Lula on the bill. "He will present his bill to Congress before the recess."

Tupi is part of an offshore "pre-salt" area that may contain 100 million barrels according to Márcio Mello, president of Brazil's petroleum geologist's association. Congress is scheduled to go on recess July 17.

Lula has already reviewed the proposed legislation presented by a committee of ministers and the chief executive of state-controlled Petrobras, said Bernardo.

As part of the plan, the government will set up a new state-owned oil company to manage the government's stake in new oil developments, he said. The company will remain "skinny," staffed by a small number of technically oriented bureaucrats and won't operate oil fields, only manage the proceeds from fields the government owns.

Brazil also plans to require companies providing important oil equipment and services in the country to set up factories and local operations, Bernardo said.

"We want Brazil to become an exporter of oil equipment and services, not just an oil exporter," he said.

Existing oil exploration rights sold to companies such as Petrobras, BG Group Plc, Repsol YPF SA, Exxon Mobil Corp. and Galp Energia SGPS SA will be respected.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

For Brazil’s Lula South America Lives a Different Reality

Following an encounter with the President of Argentina, Néstor Kirchner, and the President of ...

LETTERS

The debate over affirmative action is encouraging. If nothing else, it forces people in ...

Guaracy Falcão and wife Simone from Brazilian escola de samba Salgueiro

Brazilian Gunmen Kill Samba School Boss and Wife with 20 Shots

Just one day after a clash between the Rio de Janeiro police and drug ...

Brazil Hosts International Meeting to Fight Poverty and Spread Wealth

Brazil will be hosting from Wednesday, August 5, to Friday, August 7, the International ...

Brazil Markets Follow US Lead

Brazilian stocks rose today, as the U.S. market was bolstered by corporate merger and ...

Exports Grow 19% and Imports 60% in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Rio Grande do Sul state, in the south tip of Brazil, had a 60% ...

Brazilian Companies Stop Exporting Due to Weak Dollar

The 16.5% increase in Brazilian export revenues in the first four months of this ...

Brazil’s Central Bank to Keep Interest Rates High

In the judgment of the economist Ricardo Denadai, of LCA Consultants, despite the financial ...

Letters

Lesson number 1I disagree with both, Ana Maria Bahiana (author of the book America ...

Only Huge Mass Mobilizations Will Bring Change, Says Brazil’s Landless Leader

The main leader of Brazil’s Movement of Landless Rural Workers (MST), João Pedro Stédile, ...

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