Brazil Gets Ethanol/Gasoline/Diesel Pipeline

Oil pipeline in São Sebastião on the São Paulo coast, Brazil The Brazilian southern state of Paraná will have a multi-pipeline, which will transport alcohol fuel from the midwestern states of Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul, and the northern region of the state of Paraná to the Port of Paranaguá.

With a capacity for 18 million liters (4.8 million gallons) per year, the work, which will have an investment of approximately 2 billion reais (US$ 940.7 million), is part of the Growth Acceleration Program (PAC) of the Brazilian federal government, and was confirmed last Thursday, March 1st, Brazil's Ministry of Planning, Paulo Bernardo, in Curitiba, the capital of Paraná state.

Bernardo visited Curitiba, along with Finance Minister Guido Mantega to participate in the Southern Regional Forum of the Council for Economic and Social Development. During the forum, the PAC was officially presented to businessmen and political leaders in the region.

In addition to industry executives and politicians from Paraná, also attending the meeting were businessmen and representatives of the Federations of Industries of the states of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina.

Construction work should begin in 2008. By the end of 2006, technical and engineering studies should be concluded. Afterwards, a tender will be issued for hiring contractors.

The multi-pipeline, which will also be capable of transporting gasoline and diesel, is going to cross the city of Araucária, in the Greater Curitiba region, where the Presidente Getúlio Vargas Refinery (Repar) is based. The plant has a processing capacity of 189,000 oil barrels per day.

The work had been a dream of businessmen and politicians in Paraná for 10 years. The initial idea was to build a gas pipeline to bring in gas from Bolivia, passing through Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, and crossing the northeast and north of the state before getting to the Port of Paranaguá.

The transformation of the gas pipeline into a multi-pipeline will also allow for the transportation of alcohol fuel, of which Paraná is one of the country's largest producers. In the 2005/2006 crop, the state produced 1 million cubic meters of alcohol, of which 35% consisted of anhydrous alcohol (used as an additive to gasoline) and 65% of hydrated alcohol (vehicle fuel).

The multi-pipeline is part of a set of works for the southern Brazilian region, which, according to federal government plans, will receive investments of up to 37.5 billion reais (US$ 17.6 billion) by 2010. The funds will be invested, in infrastructure works, such as roads, ports and airports, in partnership with the private sector.

Omar Nasser works for Fiep (Federation of Industries of the State of Paraná)

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

Amrik, the Arab Life in Brazil and South America, Comes to NY

Photography show Amrik: The Arab Presence in South America, which was developed by the ...

Preventive Censorship: Brazil’s Latest Weapon to Muzzle the Press

Reporters Without Borders has recently voiced its concern about a wave of Brazilian court ...

Paulo Coelho Wants “War Criminal” Tony Blair Out of 2016 Rio Olympics

Brazilian best-selling author and Brazil’s best-known writer, Paulo Coelho, is making it clear he ...

Nuclear Center in Brazil’s Northeast Will Make Radioactive Drugs

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva inaugurated the Regional Center of Nuclear Sciences ...

Brazil Telecom to Offer New International Video Goodies

Brazil Telecom and Claxson launched in Brazil the Turbo Video VOD (Video on Demand) ...

China Gives Green Light to Brazilian Chicken

Once again Brazil will be able to export chicken meat to China, which is ...

Brazil Gets WTO’s Green Light to Retaliate Against US

The World Trade Organization has authorized Brazil to retaliate against the United States because ...

US Earning Season Lifts Brazilian Stocks

Brazilian stocks ended higher, thanks to bargain hunting activity and despite worries amid the ...

Rio, Brazil, Among 4 Finalists to Host 2016 Olympics

Rio de Janeiro in Southeast of Brazil, known worldwide as Cidade Maravilhosa (Marvelous City) ...