Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Peregrino Oil Field Restarts After Safety Halt, With Prio Nearing Control


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's Peregrino oil field is back online after a regulator-ordered pause that tested the country's safety regime and a fast-growing independent's resolve.

Prio said the national oil watchdog cleared the offshore unit at Peregrino to restart, and ramp-up begins immediately.

The shutdown in mid-August followed an audit that found gaps in safety documentation and issues in the deluge fire-protection system-enough for regulators to stop a flagship field until fixes were verified.

Why this matters beyond Brazil: Peregrino is large, long-lived and symbolically important. Since first oil in 2011, the heavy-oil field in the Campos Basin has produced roughly 300 million barrels. A 2022 expansion added a third platform and extended life toward 2040.

In normal conditions the offshore complex can handle about 100,000 to 110,000 barrels a day-material volumes for national output and for the royalty streams that fund municipalities along the coast.



The halt had real costs. Prio 's September production fell 22% from August to 71,269 barrels of oil equivalent per day.

Brokerage estimates at the time put the downtime hit at roughly $30 million to $60 million-noticeable, but manageable for a company of Prio's size. The story behind the story is strategic. Ownership is shifting from a global major to a Brazilian independent.
Prio Takes Full Control of Key Offshore Asset
Prio bought a 40% stake in 2024; in May 2025, Equinor agreed to sell its remaining 60% and operatorship to Prio for $3.35 billion plus up to $150 million in interest, pending approvals.

Until closing, Equinor still operates the asset; after that, a local player will control one of Brazil's most prominent offshore projects.

For international readers, that signals a broader pattern: maturing basins changing hands, with capable independents taking on complex assets under a regulator willing to halt production to enforce safety standards.

Bottom line: the restart reduces near-term uncertainty on volumes and cash flow, underscores regulatory rigor that investors often question in emerging markets, and marks another step in Brazil's quiet transfer of big-oil legacies to homegrown operators.

All figures and claims above reflect official company communications, Brazilian regulatory disclosures and established news reports; nothing has been invented or embellished.

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