New OffShore Gas Makes Brazil Less Dependent on Bolivia

Brazil's government-controlled oil corporation Petrobras announced this week the start of natural gas production offshore the state of Bahia, which should increase supply in the northeast of the country helping to reduce the strong dependency from Bolivia.

Rig PMNT-1 in the Manati field, belonging to the Camamu basin in the Bahia's Baixo Sul region is currently producing three million cubic meters of natural gas per day from two wells, said Petrobras in an official release.

The project also includes a gas pipeline linking Manati, 10 kilometers offshore, to the area next to the Tinharé island with a gas treatment plant in São Francisco do Conde. The project is operated by Petrobras in association with Queiroz Galvão and Norse Energy.

"When maximum potential capacity has been reached, sometime in 2007, PMNT-1 will have a daily production of six million cubic meters per day which will decisively contribute to the consolidation of the natural gas market in the northeast of Brazil," underlined the corporation.

The Manati field was discovered in October 2000 with the drilling of a first well the 1-BAS-128 in the sediment basin of Camamu, a few miles offshore. PMNT-1 is located in shallow waters ranging between 35 and 50 meters deep.

The 3 million cubic meters production, which could reach 6 million, will help Brazil in its current dispute with Bolivian president Evo Morales who last year nationalized the hydrocarbons industry and slapped higher prices and taxes on gas production.

Petrobras is the leading investor in Bolivia and virtually developed the natural gas industry in the country from scratch including the financing of a gas pipeline which supplies the São Paulo area, the heartland of Brazil's industries.

Bolivia pumps an average 26 million cubic meters per day of natural gas to Brazil and according to a 1999 contract, the million BTU (British Thermal Unit) is sold at US$ 4.3. However, the Morales administration is demanding at least US$ 5 per million BTU and a round of discussions is addressing the issue.

Petrobras has insistently argued that Bolivia needs Brazil – as much as Brazil needs Bolivian gas – because natural gas has become the main source of foreign income and helps to keep the country's economy running.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Prosecutors Want to Close Airport After Brazil’s Deadliest Plane Accident

Brazil's Federal Public Prosecutor's Office has filed a civil action requiring  "the suspension of all ...

Carlos Eduardo Cabral accused of killing Brazilian real estate agent Célia Carvalho

Brazilian Seduces Via Net and Kills. Then Is Caught in Net Sting

Brazilian real estate agent Célia Maria de Carvalho Damasceno, 43, started a passionate romance ...

Brazilian Indians Lose their Roadside Camp to Fire and Are Threatened with Death

A fire has raged through a Guarani roadside camp, in Brazil, forcing the Indians ...

First Vote on Brazil’s Mensalão Is Guilty for Corruption and Money Laundering

The first of many “votes” in the biggest corruption trial ever dealt with by ...

Trucking Revolution: Taking the Green Road in Brazil

Inside the Mercedes-Benz factory, in São Bernardo do Campo, in the Greater São Paulo, ...

Brazil and Argentina Bury the Hatchet After WTO Treaty’s Clash

Brazil and Argentina ratified their "strategic alliance" on Monday during a business seminar opened ...

Brazil’s Coffee Growers Want More Federal Help

Coffee prices improved 21.41% this year in relation to 2004, but it was still ...

Brazil Gets New Congress. 15% of Deputies Are Charged with Crimes

A report published by Globo online reveals that at least 74, 1 in 7, ...

Transoceanic Highway Brings Asia Much Closer to Brazil

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, speaking in Puerto Maldonado, Peru, yesterday, for ...

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