Brazil’s auction of drilling rights to four deep-sea oil fields raised a disappointing $17bn yesterday, officials said, well short of expectations for the highly-anticipated mega sale.
The government had hoped to collect more than $26bn from the auction of so-called pre-salt reserves trapped beneath the ocean floor off Brazil’s southeast coast.
A dozen oil majors had signed up to bid for the blocks that are estimated to contain as much as 15bn barrels of oil – nearly double the size of Norway’s reserves.
Two of the four blocks did not receive a bid.
“It’s a historic day for Brazil’s oil sector,” Decio Oddone, head of the National Petroleum Agency, said earlier, as the sale in Rio de Janeiro got under way.
The auction comes after President Jair Bolsonaro’s recent push for the Latin American country to be included in Opec.
The government had hoped the sale could turn the country into the world’s fifth largest producer in the next 10 years.
It ranked ninth in 2018, according to the US Energy Information Administration.
Brazil’s state-owned oil giant Petrobras was among the bidders that also included ExxonMobil, Shell and China’s CNOOC.
Unlike previous oil field sales, the areas up for grabs had already been explored by Petrobras, reducing the risk for buyers.
Prices were fixed and the winners were companies offering the largest cut of oil to the government.
Petrobras had already said it planned to exercise its preferential rights for two of the four blocks.
It was expected to partner with foreign explorers.
If the rights to the four areas had been sold, it would have raised 106bn reais, or more than $26bn.
In the end, nearly 70bn reais was bid.
The windfall would be a boon to Bolsonaro’s far-right government as it struggles to revive economic growth, reduce unemployment and pay down a crippling debt burden.
Pre-salt deposits account for more than 60% of Brazil’s oil production.
Environmental activists held a protest outside the luxury hotel in Rio where the auction was being held, demanding “ocean without oil.”
Describing the auction as “ridiculous,” the 350.org action group said Brazilians “want a sea free of devastating oil spills and the greed of fossil fuel corporations.” The sale comes as Brazil battles to contain a massive oil spill, which has affected hundreds of beaches along more than 2,000km of Atlantic coastline.
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