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Petrobras

22°54′34″S 43°10′45″W / 22.9094°S 43.1793°W / -22.9094; -43.1793

Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. — Petrobras
Petrobras headquarters in downtown Rio de Janeiro, built by Odebrecht S.A.[1]
TypePublic Mixed Economy
ISIN
IndustryEnergy: Oil and gas
Founded3 October 1953; 70 years ago (3 October 1953)[2]
FounderGovernment of Brazil
HeadquartersRio de Janeiro,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
ProductsPetroleum
Petroleum products
Natural gas
Lubricant
Petrochemicals
Fertilizers
Biofuels
Production output
2.07 million barrels of oil equivalent (12,700,000 GJ) per day[3]
Revenue US$ 83.9 billion (2021)[4]
US$ 37.5 billion (2021)[4]
US$ 19.9 billion (2021)[4]
Total assets US$ 174.3 billion (2021)[4]
Total equity US$ 69.8 billion (2021)[4]
OwnerGovernment of Brazil (50.26%)[5]
Number of employees
45,532 (2021)[6]
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.petrobras.com.br

Petróleo Brasileiro S.A., better known by the portmanteau Petrobras (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˌpɛtɾoˈbɾas, pet-]), is a state-owned Brazilian multinational corporation in the petroleum industry headquartered in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The company's name translates to Brazilian Petroleum Corporation — Petrobras.

The company was ranked #181 in the most recent Fortune Global 500 list.[7] In the 2020 Forbes Global 2000, Petrobras was ranked as the 65th-largest public company in the world.[8][9]

History Edit

 
Petrobras' financial growth between 2002 and 2006
 
Petrobras standard model for its land oil pump, popularly known as Wooden Horse (Cavalo de Pau in Portuguese) in UFRN, Natal, Brazil.
 
Skyscraper hosting Petrobras' offices in Paulista Avenue, São Paulo.

Petrobras was created in 1953 under the government of Brazilian president Getúlio Vargas with the slogan "The Oil is Ours" (Portuguese: "O petróleo é nosso"). It was given a legal monopoly in Brazil.[10] In 1953, Brazil produced only 2,700 barrels of oil per day.[11] In 1961, the company's REDUC refinery began operations near Rio de Janeiro,[12] and in 1963, its Cenpes research center opened in Rio de Janeiro; it remains one of the world's largest centers dedicated to energy research.[13] In 1968, the company established Petrobras Quimica S.A ("Petroquisa"), a subsidiary focused on petrochemicals and the conversion of naphtha into ethene.[14]

Petrobras had begun processing oil shale in 1953, developing the Petrosix technology for extracting oil from oil shale. It began using an industrial-size retort to process shale in the 1990s.[15] In 2006, Petrobras said that their industrial retort could process 260 tonnes/hour of oil shale.[16]

In 1994, Petrobras put the Petrobras 36, the world's largest oil platform, into service. It sank after an explosion in 2001 and was a complete loss.[17] In 1997, the government approved Law N.9.478, which broke Petrobras's monopoly and allowed competition in Brazil's oilfields, and also created the national petroleum agency, Agência Nacional do Petróleo (ANP), responsible for the regulation and supervision of the petroleum industry, and the National Council of Energy Policies, a public agency responsible for developing public energy policy.[18] In 1999, the National Petroleum Agency signed agreements with other companies, ending the company's monopoly.[19]

In 2000, Petrobras set a world record for oil exploration in deep waters, reaching a depth of 1,877 metres (6,158 ft) below sea level.[20] In 2002, Petrobras acquired the Argentine company Perez Companc Energía (PECOM Energía S.A.) from the Perez Companc Family Group and its family foundation for $1.18 billion. This acquisition included assets in Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela, Bolivia, Peru, and Ecuador, 1.1 billion barrels of crude oil reserves, and production of 181 thousand barrels of oil equivalent (1,110,000 GJ) per day.[21]

In 2005, Petrobras announced a joint venture with Nippon Alcohol Hanbai KK to sell Brazilian ethanol to Japan, called Brazil-Japan Ethanol.[22] On 21 April 2006, the company started production on the P-50 oil platform in the Albacora East field at Campos Basin, which made Brazil self-sufficient in oil production.[11] During the administration of the Workers' Party in the 2010s, Petrobras spent an estimated $40 billion subsidizing motor fuels, causing it to become the world's most indebted oil company.[23] By November 2015, the company had accumulated $128 billion in debt, 84% of it denominated in foreign currencies.[24]

Operations Edit

Business areas Edit

The company operates in six business areas, listed in order of revenue:[2]

  • Refining, transportation and marketing – refining, logistics, transportation, trading operations, oil products and crude oil exports and imports and petrochemical investments in Brazil
  • Exploration and production – crude oil, natural gas liquids (NGL) and natural gas exploration, development and production in Brazil
  • Distribution – distribution of oil products, ethanol, biodiesel and natural gas to wholesalers and through the Petrobras Distribuidora S.A. retail network in Brazil
  • Gas and power – transportation and trading of natural gas and LNG, and generation and trading of electric power, and the fertilizer business
  • International – exploration and production of oil and gas, refining, transportation and marketing, distribution and gas and power operations outside of Brazil
  • Biofuels – production of biodiesel and its co-products and ethanol-related activities such as equity investments, production and trading of ethanol, sugar and the excess electricity generated from sugarcane bagasse

Production and reserves Edit

Petrobras controls significant oil and energy assets in 16 countries in Africa, North America, South America, Europe, and Asia.[2]

However, Brazil represented 92% of Petrobras' worldwide production in 2014 and accounted for 97% of Petrobras' worldwide reserves on 31 December 2014,[2] when the company had 8,112.8 million barrels of oil equivalent (4.9633×1010 GJ) of proved developed reserves and 4,599.7 million barrels of oil equivalent (2.8140×1010 GJ) of proved undeveloped reserves in Brazil.[2] Of these, 62.7% were located in the offshore Campos Basin.[2] The largest growth prospect for the company is the Tupi oil field in the Santos Basin.[2]

In 2015, the company produced 2.284 million barrels of oil equivalent (13,970,000 GJ) per day, of which 89% was petroleum and 11% was natural gas.[2]

International investments Edit

 
Petrobras' global oil exploration, as shown in December 2006 with a total of 243,292 BOED
 
Refinery in Cochabamba, Bolivia, which was nationalized by the Bolivian government in 2007

Reserves held outside of Brazil accounted for 8.4% of production in 2014.[2] The majority of these reserves are in South America; the company has assets in Bolivia and Colombia.[2]

Petrobras owns refineries in Texas (100,000 barrels per day of throughput).[2] The company also owns exploration blocks in the Gulf of Mexico.[2]

Refineries Edit

North Region
Northeast Region
  • RNEST – Abreu e Lima Refinery – Suape (Pernambuco) – 230,000 bpd
  • RPCC – Potiguar Clara Refinery – Guamaré (Rio Grande do Norte) – 37,700 bpd
  • LUBNOR – Lubrificantes e Derivados de Petróleo do Nordeste – Fortaleza (Ceará) – 8,000 bpd
Southeast Region
  • REGAP – Gabriel Passos Refinery – Betim (Minas Gerais) – 150,000 bpd
  • REPLAN – Refinery of Paulínia – Paulínia (São Paulo) – 415,000 bpd
  • REVAP – Henrique Lages Refinery – São José dos Campos (São Paulo) – 252,000 bpd
  • RPBC – Presidente Bernardes Refinery - Cubatão (São Paulo) – 178,000 bpd
  • RECAP – Refinery of Capuava – Mauá (São Paulo) – 53,000 bpd
  • REDUC – Refinery of Duque de Caxias – Duque de Caxias (Rio de Janeiro) – 239,000 bpd
  • COMPERJ (Renamed GASLUB) – Itaboraí (Rio de Janeiro) – UNDER CONSTRUCTION
South Region
  • REPAR – Presidente Getúlio Vargas Refinery – Araucária (Paraná) – 207,563 bpd
  • REFAP – Alberto Pasqualini Refinery – Canoas (Rio Grande do Sul) – 201,280 bpd

Production Edit

In 1961, Petrobras geologist Walter K. Link published Link's memorandum, which implied that the company was better off exploring offshore instead of onshore.[25] In 1963, Petrobras discovered the Recôncavo Baiano and Carmópolis oil fields.[18]

The company's growth was halted by the 1973 oil crisis. The entire country was affected, and the "Brazilian miracle", a period when annual GDP growth exceeded 10%, ended. Petrobras nearly went bankrupt.[26] In 1974, the company discovered an oil field in the Campos Basin. This discovery boosted its finances and helped it restructure nationwide.[27] In 1975, the Brazilian Government temporarily allowed foreign operators into Brazil, and Petrobras signed exploration contracts with foreign companies for oilfields in Brazil.[28]

The company was affected by the 1979 energy crisis, although not nearly as badly as in 1973.

In 1997, Petrobras reached the production milestone of 1 million barrels (160,000 m3) per day. The company also executed agreements with other Latin American governments and began operations outside Brazil.[29]

In 2003, on its 50th anniversary, Petrobras surpassed 2 million barrels of oil equivalent (12,000,000 GJ) of daily production.[29] On 1 May 2006, after the Bolivian gas conflict, Bolivia's president Evo Morales announced the nationalization of all gas and oil fields in the country and ordered the occupation of all fields by the Bolivian Army.[30] On 4 May 2006, Petrobras cancelled a major future investment plan in Bolivia as a result.[31] The Bolivian government demanded an increase in royalty payments from foreign petroleum companies to 82%, but eventually settled for a 50% royalty interest.[32]

In 2007, Petrobras inaugurated the Petrobras 52 Oil Platform. The 52 is the biggest Brazilian oil platform and the third-biggest in the world.[33]

In 2007 and 2008, Petrobras made several major oil discoveries including the Tupi oil field (formerly known as the Lula oil field), the Jupiter field, and the Sugar Loaf field, all in the Santos Basin, 300 km off the coast of Rio de Janeiro. The oil fields were discovered by partnerships that include Petrobras, Royal Dutch Shell, and Galp Energia. However, estimates for the reserves of these new fields varied widely.[34]

 
Oil platform P-51, the first 100% Brazilian oil platform

The P-51 Platform, the first semisubmersible platform built entirely in Brazil, capable of producing up to 180,000 barrels of oil per day, started production in the Campos Basin in January 2009,[35] and in February 2009, China agreed to loan Petrobras US$10 billion in exchange for a supply of 60,000–100,000 barrels of oil per day to a subsidiary of Sinopec and 40,000-60,000 barrels of oil per day to PetroChina.[36] In August 2009, Petrobras acquired ExxonMobil's Esso assets in Chile for US$400 million.[37]

In September 2010, Petrobras completed a US$70 billion share offering, the largest share offering in history, to be used to develop newly discovered oil fields.[38] Giovanni Biscardi and Machado Meyer represented Petrobras. Biscardi brought his Brazilian corporate practice to Greenberg Traurig in January 2020.[39]

In 2012, Petrobras surrendered permits to explore offshore in New Zealand. Petrobras did not provide a reason but the New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said the decision was "not a reflection on the capacity to undertake deep-sea drilling or the prospect of activity of that area". He attributed the decision to a regrouping by the company after some setbacks.[40]

In July 2013, a worker strike action shut down production at several of the company's oil platforms.[41] In September 2013, Petrobras sold eleven onshore exploration and production blocks in Colombia to Perenco for US$380 million.[42]

In September 2013 Organizações Globo reported on national television that the US National Security Agency (NSA) had been spying on Petrobras. The information was based on a top secret NSA file provided to Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald by Edward Snowden as part of the Global surveillance disclosures. The file showed that Petrobras was one of several targets for the NSA's Blackpearl program, which extricates data from private networks.[43] Petrobras announced that it was investing R$21 billion over five years to improve its data security.[44]

In 2014, the company sold its assets in Peru to PetroChina for US$2.6 billion.[45] Also in 2014, Petrobras set a new company record for average daily production of 2.863 million barrels of oil equivalent (17,520,000 GJ).[46]

In January 2017, the company concluded the sale of 100 percent of Petrobras Chile Distribuición Ltda (PCD) to the Southern Cross Group. The transaction included the licensing of the Petrobras and Lubrax brands for 8 years. To operate the assets acquired from Petrobras in Chile, Southern Cross created Esmax, a company that acts as a Petrobras licensee in the fuel and lubricant distribution segments. In March 2019, the company concluded the sale of 100 percent of Petrobras Paraguay Distribución Limited (PPDL UK), Petrobras Paraguay Operaciones y Logística SRL (PPOL) and Petrobras Paraguay Gas SRL (PPG) to the Grupo Copetrol, through its subsidiary Paraguay Energy. The agreement provides for the licensing for the exclusive use of the Petrobras brand by Nextar (the successor of Petrobras Paraguay Operaciones y Logística SRL) at that country’s service stations, for the initial term of five years. In February 2021, the company concluded the sale of entire stake in Petrobras Uruguay Distribución S.A. (PUDSA), by indirect subsidiary (Petrobras Uruguay Sociedad Anónima de Inversión -PUSAI), in Uruguay, to Mauruguay S.A., an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Disa Corporación Petrolífera S.A. (DISA).[47]

In January 2020, Petroleo Brasileiro stated that it ended all of its business in Africa after completing the sale of a 50% stake in Petrobras Oil & Gas BV.[48]

Corporate affairs Edit

Ownership Edit

The Brazilian government directly owns 54% of Petrobras' common shares with voting rights, while the Brazilian Development Bank and Brazil's Sovereign Wealth Fund (Fundo Soberano) each control 5%, bringing the State's direct and indirect ownership to 64%.[49] The privately held shares are traded on B3, where they are part of the Ibovespa index.[citation needed] It is also listed in the New York Stock Exchange in the form of American depositary receipts and in the Madrid Stock Exchange.

Social responsibility Edit

Petrobras is a major supporter of the arts in Brazil.[50]

Operation Car Wash and related protests in Brazil Edit

Operation Car Wash (Portuguese: Operação Lava Jato) was a criminal investigation by the Federal Police of Brazil's Curitiba branch. Originally a money laundering investigation, it expanded to cover allegations of corruption at Petrobras, where executives allegedly accepted bribes in return for awarding contracts to construction firms at inflated prices.[51] The aim of the investigation was to ascertain the extent of a money laundering scheme, estimated by the Regional Superintendent of the Federal Police of Paraná State in 2015 at R$6.4–42.8 billion (US$2–13 billion), largely through the embezzlement of Petrobras funds.[52][53]: 60 

The authorities issued over a thousand warrants against business figures and politicians.[54] It also led to a wave of arrests. Fernando Soares, also known as "Fernando Baiano," a businessman and lobbyist, was allegedly the connection between major Brazilian construction firms and the government formed by the Workers’ Party(PT) and Brazilian Democratic Movement (PMDB).[55][56] Between 2014 and February 2016, the Federal Public Prosecutor's Office (Portuguese: Ministério Público da União) filed 37 criminal charges against 179 people, mostly politicians and businessmen.[57] Former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva[58] and then President Dilma Rousseff[59] were also implicated.

On 8 March 2016, Marcelo Odebrecht, CEO of Odebrecht and grandson of the company's founder, was sentenced to 19 years in prison after being convicted of paying more than $30 million in bribes to Petrobras executives.[60] Eduardo Cunha, president of the Chamber of Deputies from 2015 to 2016, was convicted of taking approximately $40 million in bribes and hiding funds in secret bank accounts and sentenced to 15 years in prison.[61][62]

Protests broke out calling for the resignation or impeachment of President Rousseff. The most widespread of these occurred on 13 March 2016 in over 300 municipalities. Police estimates gave about 3.5 million protestors throughout the country.[63] Some of the protests were in areas previously thought of as strongholds of the Workers Party, of which Rousseff was the leader.[64]

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation sued Petrobras and its auditors, PriceWaterhouseCoopers as a result of the corruption scandal.[65] In January 2018, Petrobras agreed to pay $2.95 billion to settle a U.S. class action corruption lawsuit.[66] Later in September 2018, Petrobras agreed to pay $853.2 million to settle with Brazilian and U.S. authorities.[67] Petrobras settled with shareholder Vanguard Group in June 2017.[68]

On 1 February 2023 The company informs that received the amount of R $ 132 million, as victim-beneficiary of the award-winning collaboration agreement signed between the Federal Prosecutor's Office and Rogério Santos de Araújo, before the Supreme Court.[69]

Environmental record Edit

Petrobras's website notes several initiatives to preserve the environment. These include efforts to support both ocean and forest ecosystems.[70] Most notably, Petrobras has sponsored population studies and conservation efforts for humpback whales in northeast Brazil. The company's efforts helped to rebuild Brazil's humpback whale populations from 2,000 in the mid-nineties to over 9,000 in 2008.[71]

Petrobras subscribes to the United Nations Global Compact, a voluntary agreement regarding human rights, working conditions, corruption, and the environment.[72]

In 2008, the Spanish consultancy firm Management and Excellence named Petrobras the world's most sustainable oil company.[73]

Oil spills Edit

Major oil spills – 1975 to 2001[74]
Date Volume (litres) Location State
March 1975 6 million Guanabara Bay Rio de Janeiro
October 1983 1.5–3 million Bertioga São Paulo
February 1984 700,000 Cubatão São Paulo
August 1989 690,000 São Sebastião São Paulo
January 1994 350,000–400,000 Campos Basin Rio de Janeiro
May 1994 2.7–3.1 million São Sebastião São Paulo
March 1997 600,000 – 2.8 million Guanabara Bay Rio de Janeiro
October 1998 1–1.5 million São José dos Campos São Paulo
January 2000 1.3 million Guanabara Bay Rio de Janeiro
March 2000 18,000 Tramandaí Rio Grande do Sul
March 2000 7,250 São Sebastião São Paulo
July 2000 4 million Barigui Iguaçu Rivers Paraná
August 2000 1,800 Rio Grande de Norte Rio Grande do Norte
August 2000 4,000 Angra dos Reis Rio de Janeiro
November 2000 86,000 São Sebastião São Paulo
March 2001 1.4 million Campos Basin Rio de Janeiro

Sponsorships and namesakes Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • Official website  

petrobras, confused, with, malaysian, company, petronas, 9094, 1793, 9094, 1793, petróleo, brasileiro, headquarters, downtown, janeiro, built, odebrecht, typepublic, mixed, economytraded, asb3, petr3, petr4nyse, abmad, xpbribovespa, components, latin, america,. Not to be confused with the Malaysian oil company Petronas 22 54 34 S 43 10 45 W 22 9094 S 43 1793 W 22 9094 43 1793 Petroleo Brasileiro S A PetrobrasPetrobras headquarters in downtown Rio de Janeiro built by Odebrecht S A 1 TypePublic Mixed EconomyTraded asB3 PETR3 PETR4NYSE PBR PBR ABMAD XPBRIbovespa componentS amp P Latin America 40 componentS amp P Global 1200 componentISINBRPETRACNOR9BRPETRACNPR6IndustryEnergy Oil and gasFounded3 October 1953 70 years ago 3 October 1953 2 FounderGovernment of BrazilHeadquartersRio de Janeiro BrazilArea servedWorldwideKey peopleJean Paul Prates CEO Eduardo Bacellar Chairman ProductsPetroleumPetroleum productsNatural gasLubricantPetrochemicalsFertilizersBiofuelsProduction output2 07 million barrels of oil equivalent 12 700 000 GJ per day 3 RevenueUS 83 9 billion 2021 4 Operating incomeUS 37 5 billion 2021 4 Net incomeUS 19 9 billion 2021 4 Total assetsUS 174 3 billion 2021 4 Total equityUS 69 8 billion 2021 4 OwnerGovernment of Brazil 50 26 5 Number of employees45 532 2021 6 SubsidiariesTranspetroBraskemPetrobras BiocombustivelWebsitewww petrobras com brPetroleo Brasileiro S A better known by the portmanteau Petrobras Portuguese pronunciation ˌpɛtɾoˈbɾas pet is a state owned Brazilian multinational corporation in the petroleum industry headquartered in Rio de Janeiro Brazil The company s name translates to Brazilian Petroleum Corporation Petrobras The company was ranked 181 in the most recent Fortune Global 500 list 7 In the 2020 Forbes Global 2000 Petrobras was ranked as the 65th largest public company in the world 8 9 Contents 1 History 2 Operations 2 1 Business areas 2 2 Production and reserves 2 3 International investments 2 4 Refineries 2 5 Production 3 Corporate affairs 3 1 Ownership 3 2 Social responsibility 4 Operation Car Wash and related protests in Brazil 5 Environmental record 5 1 Oil spills 6 Sponsorships and namesakes 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory Edit nbsp Petrobras financial growth between 2002 and 2006 nbsp Petrobras standard model for its land oil pump popularly known as Wooden Horse Cavalo de Pau in Portuguese in UFRN Natal Brazil nbsp Skyscraper hosting Petrobras offices in Paulista Avenue Sao Paulo Petrobras was created in 1953 under the government of Brazilian president Getulio Vargas with the slogan The Oil is Ours Portuguese O petroleo e nosso It was given a legal monopoly in Brazil 10 In 1953 Brazil produced only 2 700 barrels of oil per day 11 In 1961 the company s REDUC refinery began operations near Rio de Janeiro 12 and in 1963 its Cenpes research center opened in Rio de Janeiro it remains one of the world s largest centers dedicated to energy research 13 In 1968 the company established Petrobras Quimica S A Petroquisa a subsidiary focused on petrochemicals and the conversion of naphtha into ethene 14 Petrobras had begun processing oil shale in 1953 developing the Petrosix technology for extracting oil from oil shale It began using an industrial size retort to process shale in the 1990s 15 In 2006 Petrobras said that their industrial retort could process 260 tonnes hour of oil shale 16 In 1994 Petrobras put the Petrobras 36 the world s largest oil platform into service It sank after an explosion in 2001 and was a complete loss 17 In 1997 the government approved Law N 9 478 which broke Petrobras s monopoly and allowed competition in Brazil s oilfields and also created the national petroleum agency Agencia Nacional do Petroleo ANP responsible for the regulation and supervision of the petroleum industry and the National Council of Energy Policies a public agency responsible for developing public energy policy 18 In 1999 the National Petroleum Agency signed agreements with other companies ending the company s monopoly 19 In 2000 Petrobras set a world record for oil exploration in deep waters reaching a depth of 1 877 metres 6 158 ft below sea level 20 In 2002 Petrobras acquired the Argentine company Perez Companc Energia PECOM Energia S A from the Perez Companc Family Group and its family foundation for 1 18 billion This acquisition included assets in Argentina Brazil Venezuela Bolivia Peru and Ecuador 1 1 billion barrels of crude oil reserves and production of 181 thousand barrels of oil equivalent 1 110 000 GJ per day 21 In 2005 Petrobras announced a joint venture with Nippon Alcohol Hanbai KK to sell Brazilian ethanol to Japan called Brazil Japan Ethanol 22 On 21 April 2006 the company started production on the P 50 oil platform in the Albacora East field at Campos Basin which made Brazil self sufficient in oil production 11 During the administration of the Workers Party in the 2010s Petrobras spent an estimated 40 billion subsidizing motor fuels causing it to become the world s most indebted oil company 23 By November 2015 the company had accumulated 128 billion in debt 84 of it denominated in foreign currencies 24 Operations EditBusiness areas Edit The company operates in six business areas listed in order of revenue 2 Refining transportation and marketing refining logistics transportation trading operations oil products and crude oil exports and imports and petrochemical investments in Brazil Exploration and production crude oil natural gas liquids NGL and natural gas exploration development and production in Brazil Distribution distribution of oil products ethanol biodiesel and natural gas to wholesalers and through the Petrobras Distribuidora S A retail network in Brazil Gas and power transportation and trading of natural gas and LNG and generation and trading of electric power and the fertilizer business International exploration and production of oil and gas refining transportation and marketing distribution and gas and power operations outside of Brazil Biofuels production of biodiesel and its co products and ethanol related activities such as equity investments production and trading of ethanol sugar and the excess electricity generated from sugarcane bagasseProduction and reserves Edit Petrobras controls significant oil and energy assets in 16 countries in Africa North America South America Europe and Asia 2 However Brazil represented 92 of Petrobras worldwide production in 2014 and accounted for 97 of Petrobras worldwide reserves on 31 December 2014 2 when the company had 8 112 8 million barrels of oil equivalent 4 9633 1010 GJ of proved developed reserves and 4 599 7 million barrels of oil equivalent 2 8140 1010 GJ of proved undeveloped reserves in Brazil 2 Of these 62 7 were located in the offshore Campos Basin 2 The largest growth prospect for the company is the Tupi oil field in the Santos Basin 2 In 2015 the company produced 2 284 million barrels of oil equivalent 13 970 000 GJ per day of which 89 was petroleum and 11 was natural gas 2 International investments Edit nbsp Petrobras global oil exploration as shown in December 2006 with a total of 243 292 BOED nbsp Refinery in Cochabamba Bolivia which was nationalized by the Bolivian government in 2007Reserves held outside of Brazil accounted for 8 4 of production in 2014 2 The majority of these reserves are in South America the company has assets in Bolivia and Colombia 2 Petrobras owns refineries in Texas 100 000 barrels per day of throughput 2 The company also owns exploration blocks in the Gulf of Mexico 2 Refineries Edit North RegionREMAN Refinaria Isaac Sabba Manaus Amazonas 46 000 bpdNortheast RegionRNEST Abreu e Lima Refinery Suape Pernambuco 230 000 bpd RPCC Potiguar Clara Refinery Guamare Rio Grande do Norte 37 700 bpd LUBNOR Lubrificantes e Derivados de Petroleo do Nordeste Fortaleza Ceara 8 000 bpdSoutheast RegionREGAP Gabriel Passos Refinery Betim Minas Gerais 150 000 bpd REPLAN Refinery of Paulinia Paulinia Sao Paulo 415 000 bpd REVAP Henrique Lages Refinery Sao Jose dos Campos Sao Paulo 252 000 bpd RPBC Presidente Bernardes Refinery Cubatao Sao Paulo 178 000 bpd RECAP Refinery of Capuava Maua Sao Paulo 53 000 bpd REDUC Refinery of Duque de Caxias Duque de Caxias Rio de Janeiro 239 000 bpd COMPERJ Renamed GASLUB Itaborai Rio de Janeiro UNDER CONSTRUCTIONSouth RegionREPAR Presidente Getulio Vargas Refinery Araucaria Parana 207 563 bpd REFAP Alberto Pasqualini Refinery Canoas Rio Grande do Sul 201 280 bpdProduction Edit In 1961 Petrobras geologist Walter K Link published Link s memorandum which implied that the company was better off exploring offshore instead of onshore 25 In 1963 Petrobras discovered the Reconcavo Baiano and Carmopolis oil fields 18 The company s growth was halted by the 1973 oil crisis The entire country was affected and the Brazilian miracle a period when annual GDP growth exceeded 10 ended Petrobras nearly went bankrupt 26 In 1974 the company discovered an oil field in the Campos Basin This discovery boosted its finances and helped it restructure nationwide 27 In 1975 the Brazilian Government temporarily allowed foreign operators into Brazil and Petrobras signed exploration contracts with foreign companies for oilfields in Brazil 28 The company was affected by the 1979 energy crisis although not nearly as badly as in 1973 In 1997 Petrobras reached the production milestone of 1 million barrels 160 000 m3 per day The company also executed agreements with other Latin American governments and began operations outside Brazil 29 In 2003 on its 50th anniversary Petrobras surpassed 2 million barrels of oil equivalent 12 000 000 GJ of daily production 29 On 1 May 2006 after the Bolivian gas conflict Bolivia s president Evo Morales announced the nationalization of all gas and oil fields in the country and ordered the occupation of all fields by the Bolivian Army 30 On 4 May 2006 Petrobras cancelled a major future investment plan in Bolivia as a result 31 The Bolivian government demanded an increase in royalty payments from foreign petroleum companies to 82 but eventually settled for a 50 royalty interest 32 In 2007 Petrobras inaugurated the Petrobras 52 Oil Platform The 52 is the biggest Brazilian oil platform and the third biggest in the world 33 In 2007 and 2008 Petrobras made several major oil discoveries including the Tupi oil field formerly known as the Lula oil field the Jupiter field and the Sugar Loaf field all in the Santos Basin 300 km off the coast of Rio de Janeiro The oil fields were discovered by partnerships that include Petrobras Royal Dutch Shell and Galp Energia However estimates for the reserves of these new fields varied widely 34 nbsp Oil platform P 51 the first 100 Brazilian oil platformThe P 51 Platform the first semisubmersible platform built entirely in Brazil capable of producing up to 180 000 barrels of oil per day started production in the Campos Basin in January 2009 35 and in February 2009 China agreed to loan Petrobras US 10 billion in exchange for a supply of 60 000 100 000 barrels of oil per day to a subsidiary of Sinopec and 40 000 60 000 barrels of oil per day to PetroChina 36 In August 2009 Petrobras acquired ExxonMobil s Esso assets in Chile for US 400 million 37 In September 2010 Petrobras completed a US 70 billion share offering the largest share offering in history to be used to develop newly discovered oil fields 38 Giovanni Biscardi and Machado Meyer represented Petrobras Biscardi brought his Brazilian corporate practice to Greenberg Traurig in January 2020 39 In 2012 Petrobras surrendered permits to explore offshore in New Zealand Petrobras did not provide a reason but the New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said the decision was not a reflection on the capacity to undertake deep sea drilling or the prospect of activity of that area He attributed the decision to a regrouping by the company after some setbacks 40 In July 2013 a worker strike action shut down production at several of the company s oil platforms 41 In September 2013 Petrobras sold eleven onshore exploration and production blocks in Colombia to Perenco for US 380 million 42 In September 2013 Organizacoes Globo reported on national television that the US National Security Agency NSA had been spying on Petrobras The information was based on a top secret NSA file provided to Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald by Edward Snowden as part of the Global surveillance disclosures The file showed that Petrobras was one of several targets for the NSA s Blackpearl program which extricates data from private networks 43 Petrobras announced that it was investing R 21 billion over five years to improve its data security 44 In 2014 the company sold its assets in Peru to PetroChina for US 2 6 billion 45 Also in 2014 Petrobras set a new company record for average daily production of 2 863 million barrels of oil equivalent 17 520 000 GJ 46 In January 2017 the company concluded the sale of 100 percent of Petrobras Chile Distribuicion Ltda PCD to the Southern Cross Group The transaction included the licensing of the Petrobras and Lubrax brands for 8 years To operate the assets acquired from Petrobras in Chile Southern Cross created Esmax a company that acts as a Petrobras licensee in the fuel and lubricant distribution segments In March 2019 the company concluded the sale of 100 percent of Petrobras Paraguay Distribucion Limited PPDL UK Petrobras Paraguay Operaciones y Logistica SRL PPOL and Petrobras Paraguay Gas SRL PPG to the Grupo Copetrol through its subsidiary Paraguay Energy The agreement provides for the licensing for the exclusive use of the Petrobras brand by Nextar the successor of Petrobras Paraguay Operaciones y Logistica SRL at that country s service stations for the initial term of five years In February 2021 the company concluded the sale of entire stake in Petrobras Uruguay Distribucion S A PUDSA by indirect subsidiary Petrobras Uruguay Sociedad Anonima de Inversion PUSAI in Uruguay to Mauruguay S A an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Disa Corporacion Petrolifera S A DISA 47 In January 2020 Petroleo Brasileiro stated that it ended all of its business in Africa after completing the sale of a 50 stake in Petrobras Oil amp Gas BV 48 Corporate affairs EditOwnership Edit The Brazilian government directly owns 54 of Petrobras common shares with voting rights while the Brazilian Development Bank and Brazil s Sovereign Wealth Fund Fundo Soberano each control 5 bringing the State s direct and indirect ownership to 64 49 The privately held shares are traded on B3 where they are part of the Ibovespa index citation needed It is also listed in the New York Stock Exchange in the form of American depositary receipts and in the Madrid Stock Exchange Social responsibility Edit Petrobras is a major supporter of the arts in Brazil 50 Operation Car Wash and related protests in Brazil EditSee also Operation Car Wash 2015 2016 protests in Brazil and Offshoots of Operation Car Wash Operation Car Wash Portuguese Operacao Lava Jato was a criminal investigation by the Federal Police of Brazil s Curitiba branch Originally a money laundering investigation it expanded to cover allegations of corruption at Petrobras where executives allegedly accepted bribes in return for awarding contracts to construction firms at inflated prices 51 The aim of the investigation was to ascertain the extent of a money laundering scheme estimated by the Regional Superintendent of the Federal Police of Parana State in 2015 at R 6 4 42 8 billion US 2 13 billion largely through the embezzlement of Petrobras funds 52 53 60 The authorities issued over a thousand warrants against business figures and politicians 54 It also led to a wave of arrests Fernando Soares also known as Fernando Baiano a businessman and lobbyist was allegedly the connection between major Brazilian construction firms and the government formed by the Workers Party PT and Brazilian Democratic Movement PMDB 55 56 Between 2014 and February 2016 the Federal Public Prosecutor s Office Portuguese Ministerio Publico da Uniao filed 37 criminal charges against 179 people mostly politicians and businessmen 57 Former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva 58 and then President Dilma Rousseff 59 were also implicated On 8 March 2016 Marcelo Odebrecht CEO of Odebrecht and grandson of the company s founder was sentenced to 19 years in prison after being convicted of paying more than 30 million in bribes to Petrobras executives 60 Eduardo Cunha president of the Chamber of Deputies from 2015 to 2016 was convicted of taking approximately 40 million in bribes and hiding funds in secret bank accounts and sentenced to 15 years in prison 61 62 Protests broke out calling for the resignation or impeachment of President Rousseff The most widespread of these occurred on 13 March 2016 in over 300 municipalities Police estimates gave about 3 5 million protestors throughout the country 63 Some of the protests were in areas previously thought of as strongholds of the Workers Party of which Rousseff was the leader 64 The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation sued Petrobras and its auditors PriceWaterhouseCoopers as a result of the corruption scandal 65 In January 2018 Petrobras agreed to pay 2 95 billion to settle a U S class action corruption lawsuit 66 Later in September 2018 Petrobras agreed to pay 853 2 million to settle with Brazilian and U S authorities 67 Petrobras settled with shareholder Vanguard Group in June 2017 68 On 1 February 2023 The company informs that received the amount of R 132 million as victim beneficiary of the award winning collaboration agreement signed between the Federal Prosecutor s Office and Rogerio Santos de Araujo before the Supreme Court 69 Environmental record EditPetrobras s website notes several initiatives to preserve the environment These include efforts to support both ocean and forest ecosystems 70 Most notably Petrobras has sponsored population studies and conservation efforts for humpback whales in northeast Brazil The company s efforts helped to rebuild Brazil s humpback whale populations from 2 000 in the mid nineties to over 9 000 in 2008 71 Petrobras subscribes to the United Nations Global Compact a voluntary agreement regarding human rights working conditions corruption and the environment 72 In 2008 the Spanish consultancy firm Management and Excellence named Petrobras the world s most sustainable oil company 73 Oil spills Edit See also 1997 Guanabara Bay oil spill and 2000 Guanabara Bay oil spill Major oil spills 1975 to 2001 74 Date Volume litres Location StateMarch 1975 6 million Guanabara Bay Rio de JaneiroOctober 1983 1 5 3 million Bertioga Sao PauloFebruary 1984 700 000 Cubatao Sao PauloAugust 1989 690 000 Sao Sebastiao Sao PauloJanuary 1994 350 000 400 000 Campos Basin Rio de JaneiroMay 1994 2 7 3 1 million Sao Sebastiao Sao PauloMarch 1997 600 000 2 8 million Guanabara Bay Rio de JaneiroOctober 1998 1 1 5 million Sao Jose dos Campos Sao PauloJanuary 2000 1 3 million Guanabara Bay Rio de JaneiroMarch 2000 18 000 Tramandai Rio Grande do SulMarch 2000 7 250 Sao Sebastiao Sao PauloJuly 2000 4 million Barigui Iguacu Rivers ParanaAugust 2000 1 800 Rio Grande de Norte Rio Grande do NorteAugust 2000 4 000 Angra dos Reis Rio de JaneiroNovember 2000 86 000 Sao Sebastiao Sao PauloMarch 2001 1 4 million Campos Basin Rio de JaneiroSponsorships and namesakes EditIn the Speed Racer live action movie one of the cars featured is the Green Energy a biodiesel fueled racing car sponsored by Petrobras 75 Petrobras sponsored the Brazilian Serie A from 2009 to 2012 76 Petrobras was a secondary sponsor for the AT amp T Williams F1 Team from 1998 to 2008 and signed again with Williams F1 from 2014 onwards 77 From 2018 Petrobras left Williams and sponsored McLaren but cancelled their sponsorship at the end of 2019 Petrobras sponsored the Clube de Regatas do Flamengo in Brazil from 1984 to 2009 Racing Club de Avellaneda from 2002 to 2006 Club Atletico River Plate in Argentina from 2006 to 2012 and Universidad de Chile in Chile from 2019 to 2021 78 79 80 81 The sauropod dinosaur Petrobrasaurus is named after the company 82 Petrobras sponsored the game Copa Petrobras de Marcas an unfinished version of Stock Car Extreme by Reiza Studios the creators of the Automobilista series See also EditHistory of Brazil 1945 1964 Eletrobras H Bio Ethanol fuel in Brazil List of scandals in Brazil Petrobras 36 Oil Platform Petrosix Transpetro Tupi oil field Walter K Link Brazil China Relations Urucu Oil Province BR ManiaReferences Edit Alex Cuadros 2016 Brazillionaires Wealth Power Decadence and Hope in an American Country New York Spiegel amp Gray p 30 a b c d e f g h i j k l pbraform20f 2014 htm Generated by SEC Publisher for SEC Filing Retrieved 5 May 2016 Petrobras aprova patamar de 2 07 milhoes de barris para producao de petroleo em abril G1 7 April 2020 a b c d e Financial Statements 2021 Petrobras IR 23 February 2022 pp 11 12 15 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Shareholding Structure Demonstracoes Financeiras 2021 Petrobras IR in Brazilian Portuguese 21 February 2022 p 126 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Petrobras 2020 Global 500 Fortune Forbes Global 2000 Forbes Retrieved 31 October 2020 Petrobras e a maior empresa brasileira do ranking Forbes Global 2000 13 May 2022 Bello 14 February 2015 Whose oil in Brazil The Economist a b Muello Peter 21 April 2006 New Rig Brings Brazil Oil Self Sufficiency Washington Post Associated Press Kinch Diana 26 December 2011 Petrobras halts some Reduc refinery ops after fire MarketWatch Press Tour to the Petrobras Research and Development Center Cenpes on Monday 30 June Brazilian Government 24 June 2014 Petrobras Quimica SA Petroquisa Company Profile and News Bloomberg Markets Bloomberg News Bloomberg Retrieved 17 September 2020 Energy Minerals Division www aapg org PETROSIX INDUSTRIAL PLANT IN OPERATION PDF Petrobras P 36 Retrieved 5 May 2016 a b Andrea Novais 24 November 2011 Understand Petrobras The Brazil Business Monopoly ends for Brazil s Petrobras Offshore Magazine 1 November 1999 Wheatley Jonathan 18 December 2000 Pumping Up Petrobras Bloomberg L P Petrobras to acquire control of Perez Companc Oil amp Gas Journal 29 July 2002 Ative Solucoes Japan Petrobras Retrieved 5 May 2016 Millard Peter 3 January 2023 Petrobras Investors Tank Shares as Lula Makes a Populist Strategy Shift Bloomberg Archived from the original on 28 April 2023 Retrieved 7 July 2023 Petrobras s Dangerous Debt Math 24 Billion Owed in 24 Months Bloomberg L P 18 November 2015 Dott Robert 2001 From the Archivists Corner Linkages PDF The Outcrop 14 17 Van Riel Cees B M 29 March 2012 The Alignment Factor Routledge ISBN 9781136445460 Retrieved 5 May 2016 Campos Basin Petrobras Retrieved 5 May 2016 James Brooke 7 November 1994 U S Oil and Gas Companies Test Waters in Brazil Again New York Times a b Now 50 Petrobras the Brazilian National Oil Company Has Aged Well Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania 8 October 2003 Christine Hauser 1 May 2006 Bolivia Nationalizes Natural Gas Industry New York Times Petrobras scraps Bolivia project BBC News 4 May 2006 A hard bargain Evo Morales deals and wins on gas The Economist 2 November 2006 Petrobras starts production tests at P 52 platform Oil amp Gas Journal 26 November 2007 The next oil giant The Economist 19 March 2009 Petrobras P 51 Kicks Off Production in the Campos Basin RigZone 26 January 2009 Jonathan Wheatley 19 February 2009 Brazil to supply oil to China for loans Financial Times Archived from the original on 11 July 2015 Fabio Palmigiani 8 August 2008 Petrobras to acquire Esso assets in Chile for US 400mn BN Americas Peter Millard 24 September 2010 Petrobras Raises 70 Billion as Investors See Growth Bloomberg L P Jackson Dylan Greenberg Traurig Bolsters Brazilian Practice With Addition of Carlton Fields Shareholde Law com The American Lawyer Retrieved 28 February 2020 Brazilian oil giant Petrobras dumps NZ exploration permits New Zealand Herald 4 December 2012 Petrobras Workers Strike Shut Down Some Oil Platforms Forbes 25 July 2013 Brazilian oil giant Petrobras dumps NZ exploration permits New Zealand Herald 4 December 2012 Asher Levine 8 September 2013 U S government spied on Brazil s Petrobras oil firm Reuters Leahy Joe 18 September 2013 Brazil s Petrobras to invest heavily in data security Financial Times Chen Aizhu and Judy Hua and Anthony Boadle 13 November 2013 Petrobras sells Peru unit to PetroChina CNPC for 2 6 billion Reuters Petrobras hits historical production record Offshore Energy Today 13 January 2015 Petrobras Worldwide Brazil s Petrobras closes 1 5 billion deal to sell stake in African joint venture Reuters 14 January 2020 Retrieved 15 January 2020 Source 09 April 2011 Governance Capital Ownership at Petrobras Investor Relation Site Archived from the original on 19 September 2011 Fostering Culture We encourage the Arts and Culture Petrobras Petrobras Archived from the original on 30 May 2017 Retrieved 5 May 2016 Petrobras scandal Summary Explanation amp Operation Car Wash Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 19 March 2022 Lava Jato recupera um terco do rombo maximo estimado na Petrobras Car Wash recovers one third of estimated maximum shortfall at Petrobras Folha de S Paulo in Brazilian Portuguese 30 July 2018 Retrieved 13 June 2019 Audrey Jones de Souza Raphael Borges Mendes Jefferson Ribeiro Bastos Braga 2015 Official Car Wash Operation Financial Report Nº 2311 2015 SETEC SR DPF PR PDF Report Regional Superintendent of the Federal Police of Parana State Retrieved 12 June 2019 Booming Brazil Energea Retrieved 19 March 2022 Executivo revela atuacao de operador do PMDB na Andrade Gutierrez Executive reveals PMDB operator performance at Andrade Gutierrez Fausto Macedo in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 9 November 2018 Luciano Nacimento 26 April 2016 In Brazil lobbyist confirms payment of bribes to lower house speaker EBC Agencia Brasil Retrieved 24 November 2019 Fausto S 2017 The Lengthy Brazilian Crisis Is Not Yet Over Issue Brief 2 Brazil s former president Lula walks free from prison after supreme court ruling The Guardian 8 November 2019 Retrieved 19 March 2022 Operation Car Wash The biggest corruption scandal ever The Guardian 1 June 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2022 Brazil Petrobras scandal Tycoon Marcelo Odebrecht jailed BBC News 8 March 2016 Retrieved 8 March 2016 Brazil arrests top lawmaker behind impeachment of former president Rousseff Police The Straits Times 20 October 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2016 Brad Brooks 30 March 2017 Former Brazil house speaker Cunha sentenced to 15 years for graft Reuters Retrieved 15 September 2019 Manifestantes fazem maior protesto nacional contra o governo Dilma O Globo in Portuguese 13 March 2016 Watts Jonathan 14 March 2016 More than a million Brazilians protest against horror government The Guardian via www theguardian com Bill Gates sues oil giant Petrobras and PwC over corruption scandal The Telegraph 25 September 2015 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Petrobras to pay 2 95 billion to settle U S corruption lawsuit Reuters 3 January 2018 Retrieved 19 March 2022 Viswanatha Aruna Lewis Jeffrey T Rubenfeld Samuel 27 September 2018 Petrobras to Pay 853 2 Million to Settle Corruption Probes in U S Brazil Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 28 September 2018 Petrobras settles lawsuit with Vanguard Offshore Energy 20 June 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2022 Costa Lucy 1 February 2023 Petrobras recupera R 132 milhoes em acordo de Investidores Brasil Juntos Podemos Mais in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 9 February 2023 Mapping to preserve Petrobras Retrieved 5 May 2016 Rapoza Kenneth Maybe Petrobras Isn t So Horrible After All Forbes Petroleo Brasileiro SA Petrobras 2015 Communication on Progress UN Global Compact Retrieved 5 May 2016 Petrobras is the most sustainable oil company T amp B Petroleum 22 February 2008 Archived from the original on 5 April 2016 Case study An oil stained legacy Greenpeace do Brasil versus Petrobras S A in Tulder Rob Van Zwart Alex Van Der 20 January 2006 International Business Society Management Linking Corporate Responsibility And Globalization PDF Routledge ISBN 9780415342414 Retrieved 6 June 2012 Entry at Google Books Um brasileiro nas pistas de Speed Racer omelete uol com br 5 May 2008 Retrieved 25 August 2020 Documentarios Brasileirao Petrobras virarao filme Amambai Noticias 6 December 2010 Williams sign deal with Petrobras www motorsport com Flamengo anuncia fim do patrocinio da Petrobras Esportes Estadao Petrobras renueva su papel como sponsor de Racing Infobae 27 December 2003 Petrobras renova patrocinio do River Plate Exame 10 October 2010 Gracias Petrobras y Lubrax por estos tres anos juntos Universidad de Chile 31 December 2021 L Atkinson PETROBRASAURUS DinoChecker dinosaur archive DinoChecker External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Petrobras Official website nbsp Petrobras News Agency Petrobras Magazine Portals nbsp Brazil nbsp Companies nbsp Energy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Petrobras amp oldid 1177789478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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