Latin America’s Largest Oil and Gas Expo Begins in Rio

The largest conference in Latin America in the Oil and Gas sector, Rio Oil & Gas 2016, began on Monday, October 24th, in Rio de Janeiro, with Brazilian officials trying to convince foreign investors that Brazil is still an attractive place to do business, despite the recent troubles with its state-controlled oil and gas company, Petrobras.

It (oil and gas) is a sector that plays a central, strategic role in the economy of any country. Particularly in our economy,” said Brazil’s President Michel Temer, at the conference’s opening ceremony. “We will create here in Rio de Janeiro an environment very favorable to business, for a simple reason that we have stressed all along: the government can not do everything alone,” said Temer, signaling the government’s plan to increasingly open the state-controlled sector to the private sector.

During his speech, Temer urged Congress to vote on a bill which would ease pre-salt participation requirements, making it easier for the increase of private investments in the sector.

Foreign investors were listening closely to what Brazil’s president had to stay. Pal Eitrheim, president of Norwegian company Statoil, for example, stated during his own presentation that his company is betting on Brazil’s growth in the sector. “We want to stay here a long time,” he told participants. According to Eitrheim ‘this crisis is an opportunity to make the necessary difficult decisions to stimulate growth’.

The four-day conference will feature the participation of leading companies, including the two largest operators in Brazil, state-controlled Petrobras and Shell, and representatives from oil and gas companies from countries such as Argentina, China, France, Holland, England, Israel, Italy, Japan and Norway.

Source: www.riotimesonline.com

Brazil and US sign deal to end cotton dispute

Brazil and the United States entered into an agreement to settle the trade controversy over subsidies paid by the US government to the country’s cotton farmers.

Brazil’s Ministry of Foreign Relations reported that the two countries signed a memorandum of understanding on the cotton dispute on Wednesday (Oct. 1st), in Washington, “successfully settling a dispute that stretched for more than a decade.”
Foreign Minister Luiz Alberto Figueiredo traveled to the US alongside the Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, and Supplies, Neri Geller, to close the deal and sign the memorandum. In a statement, the Foreign Ministry said that “the bilateral agreement includes additional payments of $300 million, with flexibility for the allocation of resources, which helps to mitigate the losses sustained by Brazilian cotton farmers.”
Since the agreement applies to the cotton industry only, Brazil will still have the right to challenge the US Farm Bill before the World Trade Organization (WTO) regarding other crops.
The cotton dispute began in 2002, when Brazilian cotton farmers asked the government to file a dispute settlement case with the WTO challenging the fairness of subsidies granted by the US government to American cotton farmers and export insurance programs. The US incentives were found to be trade-distorting based on the WTO’s Agreements on Agriculture and Subsidies and Countervailing Measures.
In 2009, the WTO allowed Brazil to retaliate the US by up to $829 million. Since retaliation could have other negative impacts and would not directly benefit cotton farmers themselves, an agreement was reached whereby the US would have to pay $147.3 million every year to the Brazilian Cotton Institute created to manage the funds. In October last year, however, the payments were suspended following the passing of a new farm bill by the US Congress.
The new law maintained the payment of subsidies, violating international trade rules. As Brazil’s Foreign Ministry now reports, “under the Memorandum signed today, the United States pledged to make adjustments in its credit and export guarantee program GSM-102, which will operate within the parameters negotiated bilaterally, thus providing better conditions for the competitiveness of Brazilian products in the international market.”
Source: Agencia Brasil