Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Spanish Giant Grabs Brazil's Energy Crown For $2.2 Billion


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Spain's Iberdrola doubled down on Brazil's electricity market this week, paying 11.95 billion reais ($2.2 billioin) to buy pension fund Previ's stake in Neoenergia and secure control of the country's largest power distributor serving 40 million customers.

The deal reveals competing strategies in Latin America's 577 billion dollar energy infrastructure boom. While European utilities retreat from politically risky markets like Mexico, they pour billions into Brazil's regulated networks that promise steady returns indexed to inflation.

Previ, which manages retirement funds for Brazil's state bank employees, sold its 30.29% Neoenergia stake after holding it for 28 years. The pension fund pocketed a 2 billion real gain and plans to invest the proceeds in Brazilian government bonds paying over 13% interest.

This reflects a broader shift among Brazil's pension funds toward fixed income as they manage 11% of the country's GDP in assets. Brazil's electricity demand grows 3.6% annually, driven by data centers, mining operations, and industrial expansion.

The country generates 756 billion kilowatt-hours yearly, with 88% from clean sources including hydropower, wind, and solar. This positions Brazil as a renewable energy leader while requiring massive grid investments to handle growing capacity.



Neoenergia operates across six Brazilian states through distribution networks spanning 725,000 kilometers. The company invested 9.8 billion reais in infrastructure last year and doubled quarterly profits to 1.6 billion reais.
Iberdrola Bets on Brazil's Stable Energy Market
These fundamentals drove shares up 49% this year, outpacing Brazil's benchmark index. For Iberdrola, the acquisition strengthens its position in regulated utilities that generate predictable cash flows.

The Spanish company now controls 1.4 million kilometers of power lines across four countries, focusing on transmission and distribution rather than volatile generation businesses.

The timing contrasts sharply with Iberdrola 's 4.2 billion dollar exit from Mexico, where regulatory uncertainty and political interference threatened returns.

Brazil offers 30-year concession renewals, stable regulations, and inflation-protected revenues that attract international capital. Foreign investment in Brazil's energy sector reached 22 billion dollars in 2024, with Chinese and European companies leading the charge.

The government plans 11.3 billion reais in transmission auctions this year to connect renewable projects in the northeast to consumption centers in the southeast.

Pension fund Previ's divestment strategy extends beyond Neoenergia. The fund is selling stakes in 12 companies worth 7 billion reais total, moving money from equities to government bonds.

This shift reflects how Brazil's high interest rates make fixed income attractive compared to dividend-paying stocks. Brazil's power market faces a 200 billion dollar annual investment gap through 2030, according to development banks.

The country needs new transmission lines, smart grids, and storage systems to integrate renewable energy while maintaining reliability. Private capital provides 75% of energy sector funding, making foreign investment crucial.

Neoenergia launched Brazil's first green hydrogen refueling station this year with 30 million reais investment, positioning for emerging clean energy markets.

The project demonstrates how established utilities leverage infrastructure assets to capture new revenue streams as Brazil prepares to host the 2025 climate summit.

The deal hands Iberdrola 83.8% control of Brazil's most valuable electric utility brand while Previ locks in profits from a decades-long strategic investment.

Both sides benefit from Brazil's energy transition momentum, where stable regulations and growing demand create opportunities for patient capital in a region hungry for infrastructure investment.

MENAFN12092025007421016031ID1110053003

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Search