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BRAZIL:
Future to Run on
Natural Gas
Adalberto Marcondes*
SAO PAULO, (Tierramérica) - Gas-generated electrical plants in Brazil are
reinforcing the deep transformations underway in the country's energy matrix. By
the end of this decade, natural gas could cover 15 percent of energy consumption
-- and a 5,000-km pipeline is a key part of that future.
In the coming months, construction will begin on the National Unification Gas
Pipeline, GASUN. The pipeline will carry natural gas imported from neighbouring
Bolivia to a portion of the northern Amazon region and to the semi-arid and
impoverished Northeast.
The project received a boost when the state-run oil giant Petrobrás announced
the discovery of a major natural gas deposit in the geographic basin of Santos,
in Sao Paulo state.
It thus became necessary to come up with a new destination for the Bolivian gas.
The pipeline to southern and southeastern Brazil is already in operation.
The first stage of construction -- the entire project is budgeted at 2.48
billion dollars -- is to conclude in 2007. The first stretch of GASUN will be a
branch of the existing Brazil-Bolivia pipeline.
The GASUN portion will begin in Mimoso, in the southwest state of Mato Grosso do
Sul, and will join the Brazil-Bolivia pipeline. From there it will run towards
Brasilia, passing through the nearby city of Goiania.
According to official figures, that stage will have a price tag of 634 million
dollars and will create 1,300 jobs directly, with the potential of another
31,000 indirect jobs once construction is complete.
The most costly portion will be the central-north branch, which is to connect
the central state of Goiás and the northeastern Maranhão with 2,260 km of
pipeline. It is slated to cost 1.1 billion dollars and will pass through the
city of Palmas and reaching Belém, capital of Pará.
The entire natural gas pipeline should be complete by 2026, and the governments
of the states involved estimate that more than 7,000 people will be involved in
its construction.
Once natural gas is available in the northeastern states, such as Pará,
Tocantins, Maranhão and Piauí -- among Brazil's poorest -- it will contribute to
the creation of jobs as use of this relatively clean energy source becomes more
widespread. And state agencies have already been set up to distribute the gas.
”There are high expectations in this state,” says Piauí's secretary of industry
and commerce, Jorge Lopes.
The state's development depends on the availability of more energy resources in
the future, such as natural gas, according to Lopes. After being assured that
they will have reliable energy supplies, the executives of several ceramic
factories expressed interest in setting up shop in Piauí, said the official.
Gas-related expectations are also high in Maranhão, especially in terms of
strategic projects like a new Vale do Rio Doce plant, one of the world's leading
mining companies.
Another destination of the natural gas will be the Maranhão Aluminium
Consortium, comprising the transnational firms Alcoa, Alcan and BHP Billiton,
and one of the biggest aluminium manufacturing complexes in the world.
The complex has enormous energy needs, and is supplied by the Tucurui
hydroelectric dam. Civil society groups charge that electricity is sold to
multinationals and that there are no benefits for the local population.
But Brazil's northern states have their eye on attracting industries from the
south and southeast, where operating costs are higher than they would be in the
zones to benefit from the gas pipeline.
On another front, no environmental impact studies have been conducted on
establishing so much new industry in areas with fragile ecosystems like the
eastern Amazon and the Northeast.
But the option of natural gas for industries that are major energy consumers --
steel, chemicals, ceramics, cement, paper and cellulose -- is seen as
environmental progress.
Some of these industries still rely on firewood or coal. Refitting their energy
systems to natural gas would significantly reduce pollutants, says Gilberto
Jannuzzi, a scientist at the State University of Campinas, near Sao Paulo.
GASUN is part of an ambitious project of Petrobrás, a plan for the nationwide
presence of natural gas, expanding this fuel's use in the country's energy
matrix.
Initially, the plan was drawn up to attend to the energy demands of factories
included in the Priority Programme of Thermoelectric Generators, created after
the energy crisis and rationing in 2001.
The programme became an important tool for ensuring energy supplies for the
industrial sector. Part of this is the expanded use of natural gas in vehicles.
The aim is to connect the entire Brazilian territory to a network of gas
pipelines in a relatively short time.
Within a decade, this fuel could represent 15 percent of Brazil's energy
consumption, according to estimates cited by Ildo Sauer, director of the
Petrobrás division on natural gas and energy.
(* Adalberto Marcondes is a Tierramérica contributor. Originally published Jan.
24 by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network.
Tierramérica is a specialised news service produced by IPS with the backing of
the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Environment
Programme.)
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