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Petrobras Probe Delayed; Pre-Salt Rules to Be Announced in August
2 Jul 09
Brazil's Minister of Energy and Mines Edison Lobão earlier this week announced government plans to submit proposals for a new regulatory regime for exploration in the pre-salt layer to Congress in early August; meanwhile a congressional probe into Petrobras has been delayed further.
IHS Global Insight Perspective | | Significance | Since the announcement of the huge Tupi find in late 2007, investors have faced an element of uncertainty with regard to the stability of Brazil's oil regulations. | Implications | The government has tried to diminish these concerns with a promise to respect existing contracts, but the uncertainty continues. In this context the submission of proposals for a new regulatory framework for the pre-salt layer to Congress is being anxiously awaited by investors, although it is possible that legislators will suggest further changes once they start debating the legislative proposals. | Outlook | Exploration work in the pre-salt layer of the Santos Basin is set to continue despite the ongoing uncertainty over the new legal regime; meanwhile Petrobras is proceeding with the development of the Tupi field, where production began in May and is expected to reach 1 million b/d by 2017. |
Petrobras Probe Delayed The formal opening of an investigation (CPI) into Petrobras in the Senate expected on Tuesday (30 June) was delayed once again. Party leaders from pro-government and opposition parties had agreed to install the probe on 30 June, but the accord broke down. Allied parties blamed the opposition for the renewed impasse after they formed a new CPI into the National Department for Transport Infrastructure. The escalation of a crisis in the Senate, however, and mounting pressure on Senate president José Sarney to step down, has virtually brought all its normal work to a halt this week. There are indications that the government and opposition will try and reach a new accord, but if they do not Sarney is able to appoint the members of the commission himself in order to allow it to start work. Earlier delays had been blamed on disagreements between the two largest parties belonging to the governing coalition over who should lead the congressional probe (see Brazil: 27 May 2009: Allied Parties Attempt to Secure Control over Probe into Brazilian State Oil Company). Pre-Salt Rules for August Minister of Energy and Mines Edison Lobão announced earlier this week that the government plans to submit proposals for a new regulatory regime for exploration in the pre-salt layer to Congress in early August, marked "urgent", with the aim of completing the passage of the new legislation by the end of the year. Although the details remain vague, reports in the local press and comments by various ministers indicate that proposals under discussion could include the creation of: - a new state company, known as Petrosal, to administer blocks in the pre-salt layer that have yet to be awarded, along the lines of the Norwegian model (this proposal is known to have the personal backing of Lobão);
- a parallel licensing regime that would see the award of production-sharing contracts (PSCs) for blocks in the pre-salt layer not already under concession, alongside the maintenance of the existing concession contract model for blocks that have already been awarded; and
- a new tax on production to finance a new social fund administered by the federal government.
There is also a possibility that Petrosal would be able to award some new pre-salt blocks without tenders, as part of the unitisation of pre-salt fields that are believed to extend into areas not already under concession. This fits with suggestions by the government that Petrobras will get "special treatment", although a proposal to increase the state's stake in Petrobras in return for awarding it new blocks maybe too difficult to implement, despite Haroldo Lima, the head of the oil regulator the ANP, defending this proposal. Lima reportedly said last month that he would like the government's share of capital stock to rise from 32.2% to 60%. Outlook and Implications It does appear that the inter-ministerial committee created last July to discuss possible rule changes for pre-salt exploration is nearing the final definition of proposals for submission to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva for review. The energy and mines minister may well be rather optimistic, however, regarding the time it will take to secure the approval of the new legal framework, especially considering how long it took to get a far less politically sensitive new Gas Law through Congress. The risk is that if the process drags through into an election year it may not even be completed before President Lula's term expires at the end of 2010. Ultimately, how easy it is to get the legislation through will depend on how controversial the proposals are and on the political climate in Congress in the remaining months of the year. In this context an urgent resolution of the current crisis in the Senate is required—but without creating a rupture between President Lula's Worker's Party (PT) and its main ally the centrist Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB). The government will also be anxious to avoid further delays in the formal opening of the probe into Petrobras. This is because if the commission does not begin working until August, when legislators are due to return from a recess, it will stretch into early 2010, leaving the possibility that if it is extended by a further 180 days it will still be under way when the electoral campaign begins to heat up. This would in turn increase the chances of it becoming more politicised, and the possibility that any fresh revelations concerning the state oil company or companies associated with it could damage the electoral chances of President Lula's Chief of Staff and preferred successor Dilma Rousseff.
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