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Brazilian mission to Norway: Oil & Gas Industry Experiences

Brazilian mission to Norway: Oil & Gas Industry Experiences. Oslo and Stavanger, Norway June 2011. Contents. The Brazilian Delegation The Brazilian Mission: Highlights Brazil: Facts and Figures MDIC Framework The Brazilian Oil & Gas Industry: Challenges Final Remarks.

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Brazilian mission to Norway: Oil & Gas Industry Experiences

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  1. Brazilian mission to Norway: Oil & Gas Industry Experiences Oslo and Stavanger, Norway June 2011

  2. Contents • The Brazilian Delegation • The Brazilian Mission: Highlights • Brazil: Facts and Figures • MDIC Framework • The Brazilian Oil & Gas Industry: Challenges • Final Remarks

  3. 1. TheBrazilianDelegation

  4. 1. TheBrazilianDelegationMinistry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade

  5. 1. TheBrazilianDelegationBrazilian Presidential Chief of Staff Ministry of Mining and Energy

  6. 1. TheBrazilianDelegation Brazilian Agency for Industrial Development

  7. 1. TheBrazilianDelegation Brazilian Micro and Small Business Support Service

  8. 1. TheBrazilianDelegationPetrobras Institute for Applied Economic Research

  9. 2. TheBrazilianMission • Objectives • Benchmarking on the Norwegian experience in the development of Oil&Gas clusters • 2. Identify strategic variables to design sound public policy in the Oil&Gas field • 3. Establish linkages amidst Brazilian and Norwegian public actors

  10. 2. TheBrazilianMission • Objectives • Benchmarking on the Norwegian experience in the development of Oil&Gas clusters

  11. 3. Brazil: Factsand Figures • Capital: Brasília • Area: 8.502.728,269 km2 (5th) • Population: 190.755.799 (2010) • Urbanpopulation: 84,36% • Rural population: 15,64% • AnnualPopulationGrowth Rate: 1,17% (2000-2010) • HumanDevelopmentIndex: 0,699 (73rd) (2010) • GDP: US$1,57 trillions (2009) • GDP per capita: US$8.114 (2009) • Publicexpenditure in Education: 5,08% ofthe GDP (2008)

  12. 3. Brazil: Factsand Figures Competitive and dynamic industry which ranks among the world’s top Leader in clean and renewable energy, such as ethanol Largest consumer market in Latin America (190 mi inhabitants); 3rd largest market for cell phones, cosmetics and soft drinks 4th main aircraft manufacturer 5th largest market for personal computers 7th mainautomobile manufacturer and4th largest consumer of automobiles.

  13. 3. Brazil: factsand figures OIL GAS • ProductionofOil (Bbl/day, 2009): 2.029.000 • World position: 14th • World share: 2,53% • ConsumptionofOil (Bbl/day, 2009): 1.910.000 • World position: 11th • World share: 2,30% • Source: ANP • Production of Gas (billion m3, 2009): 21,1 • World position: 29th • World share: 0,70% • Consumption of Gas (billion m3, 2009): 20,3 • World position: 34th • World share: 0,70% • Source: ANP TheEnergyInvestment for thenext 10 years: LiquidBiofuelsSupply: US$38 bi; ElectricitySupply: US$125 billion; Oil&Gas: US$391 billion Source: EPE/MME

  14. 3. Brazil: facts and figures R&D CENTERS IN BRAZIL – WHO IS HERE

  15. Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade MDIC Foreign Trade Chamber National Development Bank CAMEX BNDES Foreign Trade Secretariat Productive Development Secretariat Innovation Secretariat Trade and Service Secretariat SECEX SDP SI SCS National Development Fund Manaus Free Trade Zone National Institute of Metrology, Normalization and Industrial Quality National Institute of Industrial Property Brazilian Agency for Industrial Development FND SUFRAMA INMETRO INPI Brazilian Micro and Small Business Support Service Brazilian Trade and Investment Promotion Agency ABDI SEBRAE APEX 4. MDIC Framework

  16. 5. TheBrazilianOil&GasIndustry: Challenges The pre-salt challenge is to drill through a 2 000 m salt layer, located at 7 000 m below sea level, approximately 300 km offshore Brazil’s east coast. Pre-saltlayer With an estimated length of 800 km and production capacity of 50 billion barrels of oil, the Brazilian pre-salt layer has become the centre of attention of the world‘s oil and gas industry and international investors. Petrobras has invested more than USD 1 billion to drill 20 wells and evaluate the quality of the reservoirs

  17. 5. TheBrazilianOil&GasIndustry: Challenges Pre-SaltTechnologicalchallenges • Rock mechanics • Production in carbonate rocks • Mechanics of salt • High-resolution Geophysics • Pipelines resistant to high pressures and temperatures in chemically hostile environments • New materials for coating of wells • Offshore structures engineering NEW KNOWLEDGE DOMAINS

  18. 5. TheBrazilianOil&GasIndustry: Challenges US$224 billion Petrobras Business Plan 2010-2014: investmentamountof

  19. 5. TheBrazilianOil&GasIndustry: Challenges 1 – Increase the local content and productivity in the O&G Supply Chain 6 – Develop technological and industrial clusters 2 – Foster the innovation, improving partnerships and getting rid of technological gaps Sustainable and Competitive Oil&Gas and Shipbuilding National Industry 5 – Boost the Brazilian firms internationalization and the foreign direct investment with technology transfer 3 – Expand the professional skills of the brazilian human resources 4 – Balance the national tax and technical conditions towards international ones

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