No menu items!

Brazil May Vote on Oil Royalties Again

By Andrew Willis, Senior Contributing Reporter

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – Deputies and senators from non-oil producing states have secured enough signatures to force a vote on President Dilma Rousseff’s partial veto of a controversial oil royalties bill. The politicians want the vote to take place before the year’s end, according to Agência Brasil.

Câmara dos Deputados (Chamber of Deputies), the Lower House of Brazil's National Congress, Brazil News
Câmara dos Deputados (Chamber of Deputies), the Lower House of Brazil’s National Congress, photo by José Cruz/ABr.

Rousseff recently used her presidential veto to remove a provision in the bill that would have distributed royalties from existing oil concessions more evenly between producer and non-producer states, leaving intact plans for a more equitable distribution from future oil concessions.

Senator Wellington Dias (PT-PI) said there are more than the minimum fifty percent plus one signatures in both the Chamber of Deputies and Senate to secure the vote.

“Just as we consider it legitimate for the president to enact a veto, the Constitution also sets out the right for National Congress to analyze the veto and […] overturn it and pass the law, without returning to the president,” Dias said.

The senator also defended the right of non-producing states to use oil royalties in multiple areas, after Rousseff said the bulk of the money would be channeled towards education in the future. The issue may eventually head to the courts if the presidential veto is overturned.

“It will only be possible to avoid the judicial process if the veto is not overturned. If the contrary happens, the question will go to the Supreme Court. The STF [Supreme Federal Court] will defend the Constitution and, by means of it, the producer states,” warned deputy Alessandro Molon (PT-RJ) who represents the oil producing states.

Off-shore oil royalties are under dispute again, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil News
Off-shore oil royalties are under dispute again, photo by Arquivo/ABr.

A legal battle is unlikely to appeal to the government, with two oil concession auctions next year, the first in a half-decade, dependent on the bill’s approval.

Brazil’s oil industry was first opened to foreign firms in 1997, with the lion’s share of oil royalties—around ten percent of sales revenue— going to the federal government and oil producing states since then.

The discovery of large deepwater ‘pre-salt’ oil reserves in 2007, around fifty billion barrels according to some estimates, heightening preexisting tensions with non-producing states who felt they were missing out on the income.

Rio de Janeiro, Espírito Santo and São Paulo, the three main producer states, were deeply unhappy with a draft bill passed by parliament’s lower house in November which proposed a more equitable distribution of oil royalties from both existing and future contracts.

They point to the Constitution which describes royalties as a recompense for the extra costs and risks that oil brings. The president’s partial veto may have been an attempt to find a middle ground, with government figures suggesting municipalities in producer states are set to be the main losers if the text is ultimately approved.

According to the data, the federal government’s share of oil royalties will drop from thirty percent today to twenty percent in 2020. Governments in producer states will see their share drop from 26.25 percent to twenty percent, while the share for municipalities in these states will fall from 26.25 percent to four percent.

Check out our other content

×
You have free article(s) remaining. Subscribe for unlimited access.