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Prio's Big Offshore Bet Shows How Brazil's Oil Map Is Quietly Changing
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Prio's production jumped about 55% in November after it took control of the Peregrino field from Equinor.
The company is targeting around 150,000 barrels per day and a sharp drop in operating costs by 2026.
The shift from state-heavy models to lean private operators is reshaping Brazil's offshore oil industry.
If you are an outsider looking at Brazil, Prio's latest numbers might look like just another oil company update. In reality, they reveal how power is moving offshore, away from slow, politicised structures and toward private operators that live or die by performance.
In November, Prio pumped close to 139,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, up from about 89,500 in October. The jump came from Peregrino, a heavy-oil field once run by Norway 's Equinor.
Output there surged from roughly 18,000 barrels per day in October to nearly 69,000 in November, as Prio lifted its stake from 40% to 80% and took over the keys.
Sales followed the same path. Prio shipped around 5.2 million barrels in November, compared with only 1.1 million a month earlier.
Prio's cost cuts and output gains reshape Brazil's offshore sector
The mature Frade field alone contributed about 1.8 million barrels, showing how the company squeezes more life out of old assets instead of relying on political promises of new state megaprojects.
The price tag for Peregrino is not small: analysts put the first phase at roughly $1.55 billion, within a larger package that could reach $3.5 billion.
But they also see an extra $380 million a year in free cash flow once production settles and costs fall, a return that markets understand far better than grand speeches about“strategic” control.
There were hiccups. Albacora Leste had a minor drop in output after a gas compressor failure, expected to normalise when replacement equipment arrives. Even so, Prio 's daily production briefly passed 150,000 barrels on some days in November.
What makes this story eye-opening for expats and foreign readers is what comes next. Management plans to cut operating expenses from roughly $550–600 million to about $250–270 million by 2026 as it repairs gas lines and captures synergies.
That means lower costs per barrel, more resilience if oil prices fall, and less room for waste. Rating agencies have already rewarded that discipline with an upgrade, and projected annual sales are set to jump from about 38 million barrels in 2025 to nearly 70 million in 2026.
Behind the headlines, Brazil's offshore sector is quietly drifting toward a more market-driven future, one project at a time.
Prio's production jumped about 55% in November after it took control of the Peregrino field from Equinor.
The company is targeting around 150,000 barrels per day and a sharp drop in operating costs by 2026.
The shift from state-heavy models to lean private operators is reshaping Brazil's offshore oil industry.
If you are an outsider looking at Brazil, Prio's latest numbers might look like just another oil company update. In reality, they reveal how power is moving offshore, away from slow, politicised structures and toward private operators that live or die by performance.
In November, Prio pumped close to 139,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, up from about 89,500 in October. The jump came from Peregrino, a heavy-oil field once run by Norway 's Equinor.
Output there surged from roughly 18,000 barrels per day in October to nearly 69,000 in November, as Prio lifted its stake from 40% to 80% and took over the keys.
Sales followed the same path. Prio shipped around 5.2 million barrels in November, compared with only 1.1 million a month earlier.
Prio's cost cuts and output gains reshape Brazil's offshore sector
The mature Frade field alone contributed about 1.8 million barrels, showing how the company squeezes more life out of old assets instead of relying on political promises of new state megaprojects.
The price tag for Peregrino is not small: analysts put the first phase at roughly $1.55 billion, within a larger package that could reach $3.5 billion.
But they also see an extra $380 million a year in free cash flow once production settles and costs fall, a return that markets understand far better than grand speeches about“strategic” control.
There were hiccups. Albacora Leste had a minor drop in output after a gas compressor failure, expected to normalise when replacement equipment arrives. Even so, Prio 's daily production briefly passed 150,000 barrels on some days in November.
What makes this story eye-opening for expats and foreign readers is what comes next. Management plans to cut operating expenses from roughly $550–600 million to about $250–270 million by 2026 as it repairs gas lines and captures synergies.
That means lower costs per barrel, more resilience if oil prices fall, and less room for waste. Rating agencies have already rewarded that discipline with an upgrade, and projected annual sales are set to jump from about 38 million barrels in 2025 to nearly 70 million in 2026.
Behind the headlines, Brazil's offshore sector is quietly drifting toward a more market-driven future, one project at a time.
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