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Petrobras Tightens Grip On Brazil's Top Oilfields As Brasília Trades Future For Cash
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Petrobras will pay R$ 6.97 billion ($1.3 billion) this month to raise its stakes in the giant Mero and Atapu pre-salt fields, in an auction where it and Shell faced no competitors.
Brasília pockets R$ 8.8 billion ($1.6 billion) now but gives up a slice of highly profitable future output, after pushing through a new law to sell the Union's share in these“non-contracted” areas.
The deal highlights a deeper clash between fiscal realism and ideological resistance to privatization and fossil fuels, as unions and climate activists criticize a move that does not actually add new oil production.
Brazil's state-controlled oil champion is turning small percentages into big power. Petrobras will disburse R$ 6.97 billion ($1.3 billion) this month to boost its stake in two of the country's most valuable pre-salt fields, Mero and Atapu, after a December auction run by Pré-Sal Petróleo (PPSA).
The company's share in Mero rises from 38.60% to 41.40%, and in Atapu from 65.687% to 66.38%, through consortia it leads alongside Shell.
For the federal government, the auction raises R$ 8.8 billion ($1.6 billion), below the R$ 10.2–14.8 billion ($1.9–2.7 billion) range the Treasury had hoped for, but still a welcome plug in a tight budget.
Brazil's Pre-Salt Sale
A mid-2025 law cleared the way to sell the Union's stakes in“non-contracted” portions of pre-salt areas. In practice, Brasília is cashing in a small slice of future revenue from highly productive barrels to ease today's fiscal pressure, after auditors warned that minimum prices might understate the assets' value.
The strategic logic for Petrobras is straightforward. Mero is one of Brazil's largest oil accumulations, with billions of barrels in place and a fleet of huge FPSO platforms that will soon be able to pump around 770,000 barrels a day.
Atapu, anchored by the P-70 platform and a second unit under development, adds another stream of low-cost pre-salt production. Both fields sit at the heart of Petrobras' 2026–2030 plan and keep its reserve base around 11 billion barrels of oil equivalent.
Opposition comes mainly from traditional left-leaning actors: oil workers' unions denounce what they call a backdoor privatization of pre-salt wealth, and climate groups accuse the government of betraying its emissions pledges.
Yet no new wells are being drilled and no extra oil is authorized; only the cash flows change hands. For investors and fiscally minded Brazilians, this looks less like a giveaway and more like a calculated swap.
It offers a bit less future state income in exchange for immediate liquidity and a stronger, more focused national champion in the one business where Brazil already plays in the global first division.
Petrobras will pay R$ 6.97 billion ($1.3 billion) this month to raise its stakes in the giant Mero and Atapu pre-salt fields, in an auction where it and Shell faced no competitors.
Brasília pockets R$ 8.8 billion ($1.6 billion) now but gives up a slice of highly profitable future output, after pushing through a new law to sell the Union's share in these“non-contracted” areas.
The deal highlights a deeper clash between fiscal realism and ideological resistance to privatization and fossil fuels, as unions and climate activists criticize a move that does not actually add new oil production.
Brazil's state-controlled oil champion is turning small percentages into big power. Petrobras will disburse R$ 6.97 billion ($1.3 billion) this month to boost its stake in two of the country's most valuable pre-salt fields, Mero and Atapu, after a December auction run by Pré-Sal Petróleo (PPSA).
The company's share in Mero rises from 38.60% to 41.40%, and in Atapu from 65.687% to 66.38%, through consortia it leads alongside Shell.
For the federal government, the auction raises R$ 8.8 billion ($1.6 billion), below the R$ 10.2–14.8 billion ($1.9–2.7 billion) range the Treasury had hoped for, but still a welcome plug in a tight budget.
Brazil's Pre-Salt Sale
A mid-2025 law cleared the way to sell the Union's stakes in“non-contracted” portions of pre-salt areas. In practice, Brasília is cashing in a small slice of future revenue from highly productive barrels to ease today's fiscal pressure, after auditors warned that minimum prices might understate the assets' value.
The strategic logic for Petrobras is straightforward. Mero is one of Brazil's largest oil accumulations, with billions of barrels in place and a fleet of huge FPSO platforms that will soon be able to pump around 770,000 barrels a day.
Atapu, anchored by the P-70 platform and a second unit under development, adds another stream of low-cost pre-salt production. Both fields sit at the heart of Petrobras' 2026–2030 plan and keep its reserve base around 11 billion barrels of oil equivalent.
Opposition comes mainly from traditional left-leaning actors: oil workers' unions denounce what they call a backdoor privatization of pre-salt wealth, and climate groups accuse the government of betraying its emissions pledges.
Yet no new wells are being drilled and no extra oil is authorized; only the cash flows change hands. For investors and fiscally minded Brazilians, this looks less like a giveaway and more like a calculated swap.
It offers a bit less future state income in exchange for immediate liquidity and a stronger, more focused national champion in the one business where Brazil already plays in the global first division.
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