Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Itaipu Impasse: Scandal And Cost Clash Test Mercosur's Energy Integration


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil and Paraguay have frozen talks to renew their 1973 Itaipu Treaty after Brazil's intelligence agency allegedly hacked Paraguay's systems to sway tariff negotiations.

The spy claims forced Paraguay to demand a transparent inquiry, halting progress on crucial pricing rules. The treaty governs the world's largest hydropower plant, which supplies half of each country's electricity.

After Itaipu paid off its final construction debt in February 2023, analysts argued that the true production cost should fall from about $16.71 per kilowatt to near $9–11. Instead, negotiators agreed in April 2024 to raise the temporary tariff to $19.28 per kilowatt through 2025.

Brazil's energy agency then injected $300 million into its commercial account to cap the rate at $17.66 and keep Brazilian distribution costs 26 percent below their 2021 peak.

Paraguay plans to consume its full power share by 2035. It now seeks permission to sell surplus energy on Brazil's free market and to international buyers.



Brazil insists on preserving its historic right to priority purchase and warns that open sales could undermine national grid stability. Paraguay's president tied treaty progress to a Mercosur summit commitment by Brazil's president to clarify the espionage allegations.

He linked future regional cooperation to resolving the spy scandal, underscoring how Mercosur 's broader integration goals hinge on successful resolution of the Itaipu impasse.

This stalemate matters for both sides. Paraguayan officials count on the treaty's fixed three-year tariff window to forecast public investments in hospitals, schools, and roads.

Meanwhile, Brazilian consumers face higher electricity bills if tariff reviews drag on or political costs remain embedded in prices.

Ultimately, resolving the spy scandal and finalizing Annex C will test whether Brazil and Paraguay can balance commercial freedom, sovereignty, and reliable power for millions across South America.

It will also serve as a bellwether for cross-border renewable energy projects and the future of Mercosur integration.

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