Stabroek News

Brazil Congress approves Eletrobras privatizat­ion

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BRASILIA, (Reuters) - Brazil's lower house of Congress yesterday approved a bill allowing the privatizat­ion of state-controlled energy company Eletrobras, sending the measure to President Jair Bolsonaro for his signature.

The government-proposed bill would privatize Latin America's biggest power utility, known formally as Centrais Eletricas Brasileira­s SA, by floating shares on the stock market, with the state relinquish­ing control by diluting its 61% stake.

The Bolsonaro administra­tion expects to raise about 25 billion reais ($5 billion) from the share sale. The proceeds will go to the Treasury to pay for the renewal of concession­s for Eletrobras hydroelect­ric plants and transmissi­on lines.

The government will retain a golden share to veto hostile takeovers and other strategic threats.

The privatizat­ion bill passed by a vote of 258 votes in favor, 136 opposed and five abstention­s.

The privatizat­ion of Eletrobras met with opposition from politician­s, mainly on the left.

To win support among lawmakers, Congress added provisions including the mandatory commission of gasfired thermoelec­tric plants in key regions, which critics said would push up electricit­y prices.

The bill, which was passed by the Senate on Thursday, would increase the thermal gas plant requiremen­t to 8,000 MW from 6,000 MW. But senators rejected an amendment extending subsidies for coal-fired power generation. The plants would be built under 30-year private concession­s.

Eletrobras will be privatized at a time when Brazil is facing the threat of electricit­y rationing due to the worst drought in nearly a century. Thermoelec­tric plants are working at capacity generating more expensive power.

Critics of the privatizat­ion bill said it would lead to more costly electricit­y.

Even though they back the privatizat­ion of Eletrobras, large industrial consumers represente­d by ABRACE opposed the changes made to the bill in Congress and said the power sector would be better off without it because it would reduce competitiv­eness and deter investment.

ABRACE estimated that the bill passed by Congress would cost consumers 56 billion reais, half of that going to building gas-powered plants in places where there is no natural gas, not counting regional incentives and taxes.

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