Petrobras
seeks partners to invest in agro-energy
By
Geovana Pagel
ANBA
São
Paulo
Petroleumworld.com
08 30 07
Besides
ensuring the Brazilian self-sufficiency in petroleum,
Petrobras is also working
to contribute to the renewable fuels sector, including
investments in logistics.
According to the New Businesses
manager at Petrobras' Corporate Supply Department, Gilberto
Ribeiro de Carvalho, the state-owned company is seeking
partners to invest in the construction of two alcohol pipes
by 2010. "We are going to do it by means of partnerships,
and we will sell shares in these projects," said Carvalho
during the o 6th Brazilian Agribusiness Congress (CBA),
held by the Brazilian Association of General Aviation (Abag),
on August 27th and 28th, in the southeastern Brazilian
city of São Paulo.
According
to the manager, the project that had its study phase
concluded is the alcohol pipe that will link the
city of Senador Canhedo, in the midwestern Brazilian state
of Goiás, to the Port of São Sebastião,
in the southeastern Brazilian city of São Paulo.
The pipe will cut through the upper portion of the Tietê River
(Alto Tietê) and will count on a storage terminal
for the bio-fuel in the municipality of Guararema. "For
the construction, we have already closed a partnership
deal with the Japanese group Mitsui, and now is a good
time for us to find new partners in Brazil," said
the manager. "By 2020, this alcohol pipe will have
capacity for transporting 12 million cubic metres per year," said
Carvalho.
The
second alcohol pipe will connect the city of Campo Grande,
capital of the midwestern Brazilian state of Mato
Grosso do Sul, to the Port of Paranaguá, in the
southern Brazilian state of Paraná. "This pipe
is still at an early study phase. We are now going to outline
its business plan," he explained.
Last
week, the president at Petrobrás, José Sérgio
Gabrielli, confirmed, during an interview in London, a
US$ 1.6 billion investment in the two alcohol pipes. With
the construction of the pipes, the company seeks to reduce
its distribution costs. If ethanol is transported through
pipes instead of by trucks, transportation costs can easily
be lowered by 20% to 30% per cubic metre, according to
estimates by the São Paulo Sugar Cane Agroindustry
Union (Unica).
According
to the manager, as bio-fuels are going to play an important
role in the market of fuels for transportation,
the company wants to meet businessmen in the sector, in
order to strengthen what is already being done domestically,
to approach the foreign market later on. "It is important
for our customers abroad to see Brazil's conditions for
producing agro-energy. If possible, we can even participate
in this production, but always with a minority stake," he
stated.
Research
Petrobras
also invests in research for the development of new technologies,
at the Petrobras Research Centre (Cenpes).
On May 2006, two pilot biodiesel production units were
inaugurated in Guamaré, in the northern Brazilian
state of Rio Grande do Norte. The differences between the
two units are their technology and bio-diesel production
capacity.
One of the experimental plants uses conventional technology
and makes biodiesel from vegetable oils. The unit has a
daily production capacity of up to 600 litres of biodiesel,
which can be increased to 20,000 litres/day. The other
plant, using technology developed by Petrobras, makes biodiesel
directly from oleaginous plants' grains and uses ethanol
as a reagent. This plant already has capacity to produce
5,000 litres of biodiesel per day.
At both units, Petrobras is prioritising the development
of national technology for producing biodiesel from castor
oil, either pure or mixed with other oils. A by-product
to both processes is glycerine, which has many different
industrial uses.
Plants
Since
last year, Petrobras is developing its first three projects
for industrial production of biodiesel in the
municipalities of Candeias, in the state of Bahia (NE),
Montes Claros, in Minas Gerais (SE), and Quixadá,
in Ceará (NE). The aim of the units is to cater
to the demand of Petrobras' Distributing Company (BR) in
northeastern Brazil, which currently sells biodiesel in
more than 4,000 gas stations across Brazil.
The
raw material consists of various vegetable oils and animal
fat, and each plant will have a production capacity
of 50 million litres per year. Total investment will be
approximately 227 million Brazilian reais (US$ 114.3 million). "The
beginning of operation at the three units is forecasted
for January 2008," said Carvalho.
The
preferential source of raw material for biodiesel production
will be family agriculture, at least in the
amount needed to obtain the Social Fuel Seal (Selo Combustível
Social). Granted by the Brazilian federal government, the
Seal warrants biodiesel producers the right to benefit
from specific public policies that foster the social inclusion
of family farmers into the biodiesel production chain.
The sector still has much potential to develop. Estimates
by Petrobras show that sugar cane bagasse and straw waste
would be sufficient to nearly double the Brazilian alcohol
production, with the inclusion of more than 13 billion
litres/year. Nevertheless, in order to accomplish that,
a challenge must be overcome, namely to consolidate technologies
for processing the lignocellulose fibre. One of the answers
might be to use enzymes produced by fungi, which are currently
being researched by Petrobras.
"Petrobras should keep investing on developing the
domestic ethanol market, improving infrastructure and logistics,
and researching new technologies for ethanol production," said
the manager.
*Translated by Gabriel Pomerancblum
- geovana.pagel@anba.com.br
São
Paulo
August
29, 2007
Copyright© 2007 São
Paulo.
All rights reserved.