Petrobras
wants Latin America gas pipeline to aid oil exports
By
Jeb Blount and Heloiza Canassa
Bloomberg
RIO
Petroleumworld.com
04 13 07
Petroleo Brasileiro SA, Brazil's state-controlled
oil company, plans to promote a South America- wide network of natural
gas pipelines to reduce costs in the region and increase energy exports.
Rio de Janeiro-based Petrobras is studying a plan that would begin
by extending pipelines in the southern half of the continent, Ildo
Sauer, the company's gas chief, said in an interview. A 50 million-cubic-meter-a-day
pipeline, double the size of the Bolivia-Brazil gas pipeline, would
be built starting in 2010 to link the region with Venezuelan gas
fields.
By substituting natural gas for petroleum fuels used by industry
and motor vehicles, and by using more biofuels such as ethanol, Petrobras
and other Latin American oil companies can cut their countries' energy
bills and increase exports of higher-value crude oil and petroleum
products, Sauer said.
``We envision an integrated pipeline system like those in North
America and Europe,'' Sauer said yesterday in his office at Petrobras
headquarters. ``By increasing our regional use of gas we can increase
our exports of oil and substitute a cleaner and cheaper fuel for
existing sources.''
The main trunk line of the pipeline network would eventually extend
5,000 kilometers (3,100 miles) pipeline from Guiria, Venezuela, near
the country's Marescal Sucre offshore gas field in the Caribbean,
to Argentina, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Brazilian President
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said in a statement Jan. 18.
The entire system upgrade and expansion might cost as much as $20
billion, Sauer said.
Pipeline Schedule
The first part of the Venezuela-Brazil link, a pipeline between
Guiria and Recife, Brazil, may begin carrying as much as 17 million
cubic meters of gas a day by 2014 or 2015, Sauer said.
At Recife, the pipeline would join with Brazil's northeastern system,
which is in the process of being connected to Brazil's main southern
pipeline network. That network will be able to feed Venezuelan gas
to Bolivia, Peru, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina, he said.
Gas in Argentina, Brazil, Peru and Bolivia may also be sent to different
locations and the network used to reroute supplies when reserves
in one country run low, he said.
Studies are far from complete, Sauer said, and will have to factor
in rivers, mountains, environmental issues and rising costs.
In the past year, the cost of pipeline construction has doubled
as Brazil expands its network and rising world energy prices place
added demands on equipment suppliers, construction companies and
pipe manufacturers, he said.
To contact the reporters on this story: Jeb Blount in Rio de Janeiro
at jblount@bloomberg.net ; Heloiza Canassa in Rio de Janeiro at hcanassa@bloomberg.net
.
Bloomberg 12
04 07
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