Promoting India Latin America Collaboration

Brazil’s Ascendency as an Oil Power

Over the next decade Brazil may become one of the largest oil producing nations in the world. In late 2007 a new and sizable oil field, dubbed the “Tupi” field, was discovered in the Santos Basin in deep water off the Brazilian coast, and it holds the promise of energy self-sufficiency for Brazil. As Dilma Rousseff, a current presidential candidate and Chief of Staff to Brazil’s President Lula, put it, “This has changed [Brazil’s] reality.”

This news can only bolster Brazil’s rising reputation as an energy giant. The country is already a powerhouse of alternative fuels, owing to its status as the world’s second largest producer of ethanol fuel.

Brazilian officials with the state-owned oil company Petrobras have said that they expect to be able to develop the field with little outside help, and Brazil certainly has an interest in keeping profits from the field at home; early estimates are that the field will increase Brazil’s proven reserves to 17.2 billion barrels of oil. While that figure pales in comparison to the reserves of some traditional oil producers like Saudi Arabia (267 billion barrels) and Canada (179 billion barrels), it would put Brazil in front of countries like Mexico, Qatar, and Algeria, and place Brazilians firmly on the list of the largest oil producing nations. Furthermore, there is still potential for the oil field’s reserves to be even larger. Haroldo Lima, the head of the National Petroleum Agency in Brazil, estimated the size at 33 billion barrels, which would put Brazil’s reserves at a whopping 42 billion barrels and push it ahead of countries like Nigeria, Libya, and the United States.

Still, getting to the oil won’t be easy. Since it is a deepwater field, specialized equipment will be necessary. One estimate puts the cost of accessing the oil at $200 billion, which is no small investment, but it’s one that Brazilian officials are taking very seriously. Part of the high cost will be acquiring or building the deepwater rigs that can reach the oil. The rigs are rare and expensive to manufacture, and Petrobras officials have discussed the possibility of building the rigs themselves if necessary, but it is more likely that they would turn to their traditional suppliers in the United States. Similarly, Brazil will need to develop infrastructure to refine the oil. Since the country already does over $2 billion a year in trade of refined oil with India, it is possible that Petrobras might turn to India for expertise in building a refinery in Brazil.

Curiously, there has even been some talk that Brazil might build a nuclear-powered submarine to guard the oil field when extraction begins. This possibility was suggested by Brazilian Defense Minister Nelson Jobim, who said that Brazil needs “to choose the padlock that befits the riches in the safe.”

It will be interesting to see how this all plays out, but for now it suffices to say that Brazil is already in a great position to assert itself as an energy producing power, and its status is continuing to rise.

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Brazil: Dancing through the economic crisis

Highlights from a summary article, part of a recent special report in the FT on Brazil.
FT.com / Reports –

This is the Brazil that finally, after years of unfulfilled promise, is catching the world’s attention – and sucking in foreign direct investment, while many rivals go without. It is a mature democracy with a diversified economy, a young, adaptable population revelling in increasingly stable employment and rising incomes. It is also a rising power in food and industrial commodities, a big future exporter of oil and home to the world’s fourth biggest derivatives and equities exchange.

Brazil, unlike Russia, India and China,… is also largely unthreatened by social, demographic or economic upheavals.
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PE investors bullish on emerging markets; to hike investments

Markets-The Economic Times

According to Emerging Market Private Equity Association, institutional investors believe emerging markets will continue to present attractive investment opportunities in the coming year and plan to maintain or expand their exposure.

“Investors recognise that emerging economies are the only ones still growing, and they also know that, since private equity deals in emerging markets do not rely on debt, the collapse of the global leveraged finance markets will not impede deal flow,” EMPEA President Sarah Alexander said.

Of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) economies, the fund partners ranked Brazil as the second most attractive destination for investment in the next 12 months behind China and just ahead of India, according to a survey by EMPEA.

In India transactions are in the form of equity with no debt component. In contrast, the US and the Europe focussed funds are more into leverage buyouts for which they raise bank loans,” Venture Intelligence CEO Arun Natarajan said.

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Look to Brasilia, Not Beijing

 WSJ.com

a more compelling challenge to the current world order may be emerging from an unlikely trio of countries that boast both impeccable democratic credentials and serious global throw weight. They are India, Brazil and South Africa and their little-noticed experiment in foreign policy coordination since 2003 to promote subtle but potentially far-reaching changes to the international system has the potential to leave fears of a rising China in the dustbin of history.

The quasi-alliance of these three powers has serious implications for the international system, and its major underwriter, the U.S., depending on how the challenge is handled. But an equally important, and quite unintended implication, is the sabotage of China’s great power ambitions. By robbing China of its claims to represent developing countries, this new cooperative trio could sideline China from the major debates in international affairs. That may be good news for domestic reform in China, which has long been stunted by the country’s great power ambitions.

The origins of the India-Brazil-South Africa Dialogue Forum (IBSA) lie in South Africa’s quest for a new allies more consonant with its interests and ideas following the end of apartheid in 1994. The immediate impetus came from Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who floated a formal cooperation scheme in early 2003. In June of that year, the foreign ministers of the three countries inaugurated the group in Brasilia, calling for a strengthening of international institutions to address the concerns of developing countries in areas like poverty, the environment and technology. Since then, according to Sarah-Lea John de Sousa of Madrid’s FRIDE think tank, the trio has been gaining support as “spokesmen for developing countries at the global level.”

IBSA members note that they are “vibrant democracies” and Daniel Flemes of Hamburg-based German Institute for Global and Area Studies noted in a 2007 paper that “IBSA’s common identity is based on values such as democracy, personal freedoms and human rights.” Human rights, civil society, social empowerment and “gender mainstreaming” are central to their moral capital.

Indian and Brazilian diplomats in particular, already among the world’s best, can advance the IBSA agenda because they share common ideals.

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Indian Mills Sign Sugar Import Deals

WSJ.com

Mills in northern India have struck deals in the past 10 days to import 80,000-100,000 metric tons of raw sugar, industry officials said Wednesday.

The raw sugar is being imported mostly from Brazil at $300-$330/ton, free on board. The shipments are expected to arrive in the June-July period.

Indian mills are importing sugar to optimize their unutilized refining capacity, following a shortfall in the country’s cane output in the marketing year

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Mr. Lula goes to Washington

Lula is not only a political and diplomatic pro, but also a statesman. Amazingly, he comes off as more prepared than Obama with solid answers to reporter questions, with a sense of humor as well. Political leadership of this sort inspires business confidence in a country. Must watch link -
CSPAN Video- Pres. Obama & Brazilian President Lula’s press conference

What is brought up by a Brazilian reporter is the thorny trade issue of the US tariff on imported ethanol from Brazil. A policy that is not only bad economics, but bad morality – promoting corn-based ethanol in deference to the US domestic farm lobby that results in higher global food prices for corn-based foods.

Two other videos of Lula being interviewed that show his considerable skills no doubt honed from years as a union leader dealing with tough opponents. His incredible life story – going from a shoe-shine boy to Brazil’s president, is one that needs more press coverage outside Latin America.

Frost Over The World – President Lula – 08 Jun 07

Soundbite Central: President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
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Jim Rogers Busy Turning Raw Land Into Farmland in Brazil

Recession or no recession there are no holidays or time-offs for eating…
As Indians get richer, more of them will eat higher quality food – and about few hundred million will step up from 1/2 to 3 meals a day. Brazil is one of the few places where massive areas of land can be brought under cultivation
Investorazzi.com » Blog Archive »

what we’re doing is buying land in Brazil, and the other one is buying land in Canada, and we’re starting to farm it. In Brazil, greenfield, in Canada, existing farms, because if I’m right, agriculture is going to be one of the great industries of the next 20 years or so, 30 years

What we’re doing, because we see a good future for agriculture, we’re buying some of the land, and fertilizing it, and irrigating it, and turning it into farmland— raw land into farm land— clearing it, which we will farm and hopefully make a lot of money from farming it. And then some day, we’ll probably sell the farms— that’s the plan.

“We’re still going to eat probably. We’re still going to wear clothes probably. You know nobody – Farmers cannot get loans for fertilizer right now. So the supply of everything is going to continue under pressure. Uh the inventories of food are the lowest they’ve been in 50 years. We have serious supply problems developing for many mining goods, oil, agriculture. So even if demand goes flat or down as it did in the 30s as it did in the 70s you can still have a nice market.”

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India and Latin America: Water Scarcity vs. Abundance

Water resources compared across India and LatAm's Southern Cone

Source: Aquastat, Year 2005

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Indian Oil Corp plans to buy sugar mill in Brazil


International Business Times

State-run Indian Oil Corp is planning to buy a sugar mill and set up a refinery in Brazil to produce ethanol, the Indian government said on Monday.

Indian oil firms view investments in Brazil for ethanol production as highly strategic, the country’s junior food, minister, Akhilesh Prasad Singh, told parliament in a written reply to a question.

Another Indian petroleum refiner, Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd, was working with Brazil’s Petroleo Brasileiro S.A. for investments in the country to produce ethanol, the minister said.

He told lawmakers India’s ethanol production was estimated at 2,730 million litres in the year to September 2008, down from 2,900 litres a year ago.

India, which imports 70 percent of the oil it consumes and heavily discounts fuel sales, asked oil firms to mix ethanol with petrol to 10 percent from October, when the new sugarcane crushing season began.

Before October, oil firms were mixing 5 percent ethanol, an alternative fuel made from cane or corn, with petrol almost nationwide. India has set an ambitious target of reaching 20-percent biofuel use within a decade.

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India may import raw sugar in 2009

The Economic Times

India will produce less sugar than it would consume this year. Normally this should be enough to make the bulls snort in anticipation of profits. But not this time. The red rags are too many. The crunch will come between April and September 2009. By April domestic production will grind to a halt, while consumption will show its normal summer increase as we beat the heat with colas and ice creams. Instead of building up stocks, we would be eating into them.

Since we still have some unsold sugar from previous years, there won’t be outright shortage. But sugar won’t be plentiful either. With just-enough supply, the natural tendency of traders is to push up prices by holding back just a little. Being an election year, it is unlikely the government will allow prices rise beyond a point. The big question is what will the government do to keep things in check.

The easiest way would be to allow unfettered import of ready-to-eat white sugar. The world market is waiting to pounce on the Indian market. ISO says out of the 34 mn t raw sugar that Brazil will produce this season, it can export almost 22 mn t. This is 17% more than last year. Ocean freights are so low, it costs just $18/t to ship sugar thousands of miles from Brazil to India. Traders at international trading houses here say at current New York prices, white sugar from Brazil can reach India at $340/t or about Rs 18/kg. In case the government allows white sugar imports, local mills can kiss life goodbye.
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