Imperial Valley Press

Brazil’s Petrobras to be led by privatizat­ion advocate

- BY DIANE JEANTET

RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil’s President-elect Jair Bolsonaro on Monday named Roberto Castello Branco, a pro-market reformer, as future chief executive of the country’s state-controlled oil company, Petrobras.

Castello Branco, a former member of Petrobras’ board, has advocated privatizin­g the oil giant, a measure also supported by his close ally and long-time friend Paulo Guedes, designated as Brazil’s next finance minister.

The nomination of Castello Branco, an engineer with experience in both the oil sector and running large companies, appeared to be garnering initial support.

“It’s a name that arrives with quite a lot of strength,” said Gilberto Braga, a finance professor at the Ibmec university in Rio de Janeiro, citing Costello Branco’s time as a Petrobras board member and previously as a director of mining company Vale.

“He will have autonomy to deliver a market-friendly agenda, with some freedom to set fuel prices and more leeway to accelerate divestment­s,” concurred the Eurasia Group in a press release.

Bolsonaro’s administra­tion takes over on Jan. 1. Experts believe that a wholesale privatizat­ion of Petrobras is unlikely under the next government, despite strong support from market-friendly Guedes and Costello Branco.

Negotiatio­ns with finance secretary Guedes about the future of the national oil company are underway, Bolsonaro told reporters outside of his home in Rio de Janeiro on Monday.

“Some of it could be privatized, but not all of it. It is a strategic company,” said the former army captain and congressma­n for 27 years.

In a June op-ed published in the Brazilian newspaper Folha de S. Paulo, Costello Branco argued in favor of privatizat­ion, urging more competitio­n in the energy sector.

“We need several private companies to compete in the fuel market,” he wrote.

Privatizat­ion is polemical in Latin America’s largest nation and highly unpopular among the military, a large sector of Bolsonaro’s support.

Any privatizat­ion, which could lead to an end to subsidized fuel prices, would also likely be strongly opposed by many sectors, including transporta­tion.

Still, Petrobras’ noncore activities, such as refining and distributi­on, could be privatized, experts said.

The introducti­on of market-driven fuel prices by Petrobras earlier this year led to a major truckers’ strike, paralyzing the country for days.

The current government of President Michel Temer put an end to demonstrat­ions after providing fuel subsidies aimed at lowering diesel prices.

In his op-ed, Costello Branco sharply criticized Temer’s decision, arguing that ultimately competitio­n in the energy sector would be better for the nation.

“It’s unacceptab­le to maintain hundreds of billions of dollars allocated to state companies for activities that could be undertaken by private initiative while the state doesn’t have money to pay for basic obligation­s, like health care, education and public security,” he wrote.

Still, experts say the current diesel subsidy is likely to be maintained.

“A new shutdown (by truckers) would be disastrous for this government,” said Braga.

Before being a Petrobras board member in 2015 and 2016, Castello Branco was director of mining company Vale from 1999 to 2014.

He is currently a professor at Fundacao Getulio Vargas, a university and business-focused think tank. Costello Branco also did post-doctoral studies at the University of Chicago.

He is the third top Bolsonaro nominee to be trained at the University of Chicago, after Guedes and economist Joaquim Levy, who was recently appointed president of Brazil’s National Economic and Social Developmen­t Bank.

In a statement, Petrobras said the current chief executive, Ivan Monteiro, will remain until the new administra­tion takes over.

 ??  ?? In this Feb. 4, 2015, file photo, workers whose company is contracted by Brazil’s state oil company Petrobras throw their work uniforms at the company’s building headquarte­rs to protest corruption, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. AP PHOTO/SILVIA IZQUIERDO
In this Feb. 4, 2015, file photo, workers whose company is contracted by Brazil’s state oil company Petrobras throw their work uniforms at the company’s building headquarte­rs to protest corruption, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. AP PHOTO/SILVIA IZQUIERDO

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