Rio’s Gas Surge Fuels Brazil’s Energy Future Amid Market Shifts

By The Rio Times | Created at 2025-01-30 18:45:32 | Updated at 2025-01-31 01:33:11 7 hours ago
Truth

The Federation of Industries of Rio de Janeiro (Firjan) reports the state now supplies 74% of Brazil’s natural gas, producing 113 million cubic meters daily in 2024—a 6% annual rise.

National output reached 151 million cubic meters daily, though 54% of Rio’s gas remains reinjected into oil fields to boost crude recovery, leaving only 23% available for market use.

Equinor’s $9 billion Raia project, operated with Repsol Sinopec and Petrobras, aims to reverse this trend. Starting in 2028, it will deliver 16 million cubic meters daily, meeting 15% of Brazil’s demand.

The Campos Basin development will connect to Cabiúnas terminal via a 200-kilometer subsea pipeline, generating $54 billion in royalties and creating 50,000 jobs. Drilling begins in 2026 using Valaris’ DS-17 rig under a $498 million contract.

Regulatory shifts are accelerating market freedom. Three Rio industries migrated to the free gas market in 2024, cutting costs by $50 million annually, with 12 more awaiting approval.

Brazil’s Gas Market Reforms

ANP interim director Patricia Baran confirmed pending gas-sector regulations for 2025, targeting reduced Petrobras dominance—currently holding 80% market share. New infrastructure, such as Petrobras’ Rota 3 pipeline, has been operational since October.

It adds 18 million cubic meters daily to the Santos Basin supply. Argentina’s Vaca Muerta gas imports via Bolivia and PPSA’s direct sales of state-owned reserves aim to diversify supply sources.

This strategy could potentially lower prices by 40% by 2025. Rio holds 72% of Brazil’s 517 billion cubic meters in proven gas reserves, driven by offshore discoveries.

Firjan projects $150 billion in sector investments by 2035, spanning biomethane plants, thermal power, and industrial hubs. Yet reinjection limits under a 2024 presidential decree risk curbing future oil investments, complicating growth.

As Brazil’s gas demand grows 13% annually, market liberalization and private capital now dictate progress—not state mandates. Firms like Equinor and Valaris exemplify this shift, betting on efficiency over bureaucracy to unlock reserves and stabilize supply.

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