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Brazil
Last Updated: October 9, 2015 (Notes)
Updated: December 2, 2015 (revision)
Overview
Brazil is the 8th-largest total energy consumer and 9th-largest liquid fuels producer in the world.
In 2014, Brazil was the eighth-largest energy consumer in the world and the third-largest in the Americas, behind the United States and Canada, according to BP statistics. Total primary energy consumption in Brazil has nearly doubled in the past decade1 because of sustained economic growth. The largest share of Brazil's total energy consumption is oil and other liquid fuels, followed by hydroelectricity and natural gas.2
Brazil is also a significant energy producer. In 2014, Brazil produced 2.95 million barrels per day (b/d), representing a 9.5% increase from 2013, making it the world's 9th-largest producer and 3rd-largest in the Americas behind the U.S. and Canada. Fossil fuels represented about 60% of Brazil's domestic energy supply in 2014, an increase of nearly 5% compared with 2013. Renewable energy sources, including hydropower and biomass, accounted for slightly less than 40% of Brazil's energy supply in 2014, a decrease of 0.5% from 2013, primarily the result of a reduction in hydropower generation (-5.6%).3
Increasing domestic oil production has been a long-term goal of the Brazilian government, and discoveries of large offshore, presalt oil deposits have already transformed Brazil into a top-10 liquid fuels producer. Weak economic growth and corruption scandals implicating the head of State-controlled Petróleo Brasileiro S.A.(Petrobras) dampen prospects for production growth in the short term.
Source: Central Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook
Petroleum and other liquids
Brazil was the second-largest producer of petroleum in South America in 2014, behind Venezuela.
Sector organization
State-controlled Petróleo Brasileiro S.A.(Petrobras) is the dominant participant in Brazil's oil sector, holding important positions in upstream, midstream, and downstream activities. The company held a monopoly on oil-related activities in Brazil until 1997, when the government opened the sector to competition. Royal Dutch Shell was the first foreign crude oil producer in the country, and it has been joined by Chevron, Repsol, BP, Anadarko, El Paso, Galp Energia, Statoil, BG Group, Sinopec, ONGC, TNK-BP, among others. Competition in the oil sector is not just from foreign companies. Brazilian oil company OGX, which is staffed largely with former Petrobras employees, started to produce oil in the Campos Basin in 2011.
The principal government agency charged with regulating and monitoring the oil sector is the Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis (ANP), which is responsible for issuing exploration and production licenses and ensuring compliance with relevant regulations. Recent legislation concerning presalt exploration and production has changed the operating environment somewhat. See the Presalt Oil section for additional information.
Reserves
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that in 2015, Brazil had 15 billion barrels of proved oil reserves, although ANP's estimates are somewhat higher at 16.2 billion barrels of proved oil reserves at the end of 2014. This amounts to the second-largest level in South America after Venezuela, and about 1% of the world's total reserves.4 More than 94% of Brazil's reserves are located offshore, and 80% of all reserves are found offshore near the state of Rio de Janeiro. The next largest accumulation of reserves is located off the coast of Espírito Santo state, with 9% of the country's reserves.5 Reserves are expected to rise as presalt resources are further explored.
Production and consumption
More than 91% of Brazil's oil production is offshore in very deep water and consists of mostly heavy grades.
In 2014, Brazil produced 2.95 million b/d of petroleum and other liquids. Crude oil made up 2.2 million b/d, and 551,000 b/d was biofuels, with the remainder produced as condensate and natural gas liquids (NGLs). The state of Rio de Janeiro produced 1.54 million b/d in 2014, accounting for 68.4% of the total production. São Paulo recorded the highest percentage growth in oil production in 2014 (134.4%) with 93,000 b/d as a result of increased production from the Baúna and Sapinhoá fields in the Santos Basin. Espírito Santo state remained the second-largest producer in the country with 352,700 b/d average production in 2014.6
A growing share of production is coming from Brazil's oil deposits in the presalt layer, making up about a quarter of total Brazilian output by April 2015 and increasing 63% year-over-year.7 In July 2015, oil production in the presalt layer hit a record 865,000 b/d, as new wells came onstream in the Santos basin.8 Presalt production has seen a dramatic rise over the past few years: it accounted for 0.4% of total production in 2008 when oil from the presalt was first produced.9 The 10% year-over-year increase in liquid fuels production was undoubtedly boosted by the delivery of four new floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) facilities: P-62, P-58, Cidade de Ilhabela, and Cidade de Mangaratiba, with the last three FPSOs producing in the presalt layer.10
Brazil's consumption of petroleum and other liquid fuels continues to surpass its production. In 2014, Brazil's demand for petroleum and other liquid fuels was 3.2 million b/d, up from 3.0 million b/d in 2013.11 However, EIA projects that production will exceed consumption in 2016 for the first time since 2008. This forecast is highly uncertain because the effect of lower crude oil prices since 2014 may adversely affect development and production plans. Furthermore, the fallout from the corruption scandal may further dampen Brazil's prospects.
Petrobras is under investigation in Brazil and in the United States for bribery and money laundering. The multi-billion-dollar corruption scandal (Operation Car Wash scandal) started with the arrest in March 2014 of Paulo Roberto Costa, head of refining operations for Petrobras (2004–2012), who was accused of money laundering. The scandal escalated further with allegations of government corruption and a kick-back scheme, resulting in losses of more than $8 billion, multiple arrests, and the resignation of the CEO, Maria das Graças Foster. The new CEO, Aldemir Bendine, was appointed in February 2015.
While the investigation is ongoing, the company's auditor would not certify its financial statements, which has kept Petrobras from accessing international capital markets, compounding the company's problems that have partly resulted from falling oil prices. The corruption scandal has altered Petrobras' investment plans in Brazil's oil industry, and instead of increased investments, the company was forced to undertake a sizeable divestment plan in order to raise funds.
Petrobras's investments in 2014 totaled BRL87.1 billion ($27.4 billion), which represents a 17% decrease from 2013 investments. In February 2015, Petrobras announced its 2015–16 divestment plan, which totals $13.7 billion, divided between the areas of exploration and production in Brazil and internationally (30%), refining, transportation, and marketing (30%), and natural gas and power (40%).
In its 2015 five-year Business and Management Plan, Petrobras revised its total production target of oil and natural gas (including international production) to 3.7 million barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2020. This production level represents another downward revision from its 2014 and 2013 expectations of 4.0 million b/d and 5.0 million b/d, respectively, as lower crude oil prices and the significant dollar-denominated debt of Petrobras dampen growth prospects.
For 2015 and 2016, the company is targeting production growth of 4% and 3%, respectively.12 The newest Business and Management Plan estimates that the presalt will represent more than 50% of total oil production by 2020.13
Downstream
Nearly one-third of all crude oil processed in Latin America takes place in Brazil, according to IHS Energy.14 Brazil had a total of 2.4 million b/d of crude oil refining capacity at 17 refineries in 2014, a 6.8% increase in capacity from 2013. Petrobras operates 13 of these refineries that refine a total of 2.0 million b/d of product.15 The largest facility is the 434,000 b/d Replan refinery in São Paulo. Because Brazil's oil refineries do not have the technical capabilities to process heavier crudes, the country must export some of its heavy crude oil and import light crude oil. In 2014, Brazil's refineries were operating at about 95% capacity—slightly lower than the 98% capacity in 2013—as the Abreu e Lima refinery began its partial operation.16
The Abreu e Lima refinery began partial operation in December 2014, with an installed crude distillation capacity of 74,000 b/d, a volume that is expected to rise to 115,000 b/d, according to the Petrobras Management Report 2014.17 The refinery initially began as a joint venture with Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), but it moved forward without PDVSA when it was unable to provide the 40% equity ($17 billion).18 Once fully operational, the Abreu e Lima refinery is expected to have an ultra-low-sulfur diesel yield of 70%. The cost of the refinery is estimated at nearly $20 billion.19 The second phase of the Abreu e Lima refinery, which would add a second crude tower and an upgrading unit, has been postponed. Petrobras is also postponing the Complexo Petroquímico do Rio de Janeiro (Comperj) refinery project, and the company decided in January 2015 to terminate the investment projects for the construction of the Premium I and Premium II refineries.20
Petrobras's downstream investments for 2015–19 are set at $12.8 billion, with 69% for maintenance and infrastructure, 11% for the Abreu e Lima refinery, 10% for distribution, and 10% for other expenses.21
Exports and imports
The United States imported 145,000 b/d of Brazilian crude oil and exported 215,000 b/d of petroleum products to Brazil in 2014.
Brazil exported 518,904 b/d of crude oil in 2014, a 36% increase from the previous year.22 The United States imported 145,000 b/d of crude oil from Brazil in 2014, an increase of more than 30% from 2013, making it the largest importer of Brazil's crude oil. China, the second-largest importer of Brazilian crude oil, imported 106,849 b/d in 2014. India was the third-largest importer of Brazilian crude oil in 2014, with 81,643 b/d.23
The regions that exported the largest volume of crude oil to Brazil were Africa and the Middle East, making up 68.7% and 26.3%, respectively, of the total. Nigeria by itself accounted for 52.4% of total crude oil exports to Brazil in 2014, with 75.5 million barrels. Imported oil from China in 2014 dropped 4.5% compared to 2013.24
To meet the rising demand, compensate for its fuel price subsidies25, and supplement its underinvested refining sector26, Brazil continues to be a significant importer of petroleum products. In 2014, the country imported 144.2 million barrels of petroleum products.27
The United States was the largest source country of petroleum products for Brazil, exporting 217,000 b/d in 2014. Brazil's imports of petroleum products from the United States in 2014 rose 20% compared with the previous year. India was Brazil's second-largest source of imported petroleum products at 78,932 b/d.28
The transportation sector accounts for a large share of petroleum products demand. Because of continued fuel price subsidies and a struggling refining sector, Brazil must import petroleum products to satisfy demand in the transportation sector. In 2014, energy consumption in the transportation sector was 86.3 million tons of oil equivalent (Mtoe), with diesel oil accounting for 45%, gasoline accounting for about 30%, and ethanol accounting for 15%.29
Presalt oil
The world's largest oil discoveries in recent years are in Brazil's offshore, presalt basins.
Presalt oil is generally characterized as oil reserves situated exceptionally deep under thick layers of rock and salt and requiring substantial investment to extract. The large depth and pressure involved in presalt production present significant technical hurdles that must be overcome. Post-salt oil is characterized as oil found above the rock and salt layers.
In 2005, Petrobras drilled exploratory wells near the Tupi field and discovered hydrocarbons below the salt layer. In 2007 a consortium of Petrobras, BG Group, and Petrogal drilled in the Tupi field and discovered an estimated 5–8 billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe) resources in a presalt zone 18,000 feet below the ocean surface under a thick layer of salt. For comparison, EIA defines ultradeep drilling in the Gulf of Mexico as 5,000 feet or more. Further exploration showed that hydrocarbon deposits in the presalt layer extended through the Santos, Campos, and Espírito Santo basins.
Petrobras has developed its major presalt assets in three discrete phases: 1) extended well tests; 2) pilot projects; and 3) large-scale production through multiple, duplicate floating production, storage, and offloading (FPSO) facilities.
Following Tupi, many presalt finds were announced in the Santos Basin. Pilot projects in the Lula and Sapinhoá fields began production in 2009 and 2010, respectively. Oil production in the presalt rose from 110.5 million barrels in 2013 to 179.8 million barrels in 2014, an increase of 62.7% and an average production of 492,700 b/d.30 Brazil's oil output decreased between 2012 and 2013 as project delays, coupled with high decline rates at legacy fields, made production growth unattainable. However, as long-delayed FPSOs were delivered, 2014 saw a jump in production, reversing the declines in the previous two years. So far in 2015, the increasing trend has continued.
With the exception of the Libra field, all presalt areas currently under development were non competitively granted to Petrobras. Through the Transfer of Rights Agreement of 2010, in exchange for $42 billion of Petrobras shares, the government gave Petrobras rights to explore and produce 5 billion boe from six presalt areas in the Santos Basin: Florim, Búzios, Sul de Guará, Entorno de lara, Sul de Lula, and Nordeste de Tupi. Petrobras discovered significant reserves in addition to the original 5 billion boe. In June 2014, the government granted Petrobras the rights to produce surplus volumes estimated at 9.8–15.2 billion boe found in the Búzios, Entorno de lara, Florim, and Nordeste de Tupi areas. Petrobras expects first production from the Transfer of Rights areas by 2016 and from the surplus volumes by 2021.31
In October 2013, Brazil concluded its first presalt licensing round for the Libra field, estimated to hold 8-12 billion barrels of recoverable reserves. The only and thus winning bid was a consortium of Petrobras, Royal Dutch Shell, Total, and Chinese national oil companies China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC). Brazil anticipates oil production from the presalt layer will account for most of the projected growth from 2020–30.
In November 2013, a month after concluding the first presalt licensing round for the Libra field, Brazil's Petrobras announced the discovery of the Franco field, a presalt find, which could be larger than the 8-12 billion barrels of recoverable reserves found in the Libra field.32 Additionally, in May 2014, Petrobras made another presalt find of potentially 5 billion barrels in the Entorno de lara block.33
ANP has approved 34 of the 39 companies that will participate in Brazil's 13th licensing round, which will take place on October 7, 2015.34
Regulatory reforms
Petrobras is currently the sole operator of each production-sharing agreement, but, a new bill in Brazilian Congress has the potential to remove this obligation and ease the pressure on Petrobras.
Prior to the presalt discoveries, Brazilian law allowed all companies to compete in auctions to win concessions and to operate exploration blocks. This changed in 2010, under the PT (Workers' Party), when the Brazilian government passed legislation instituting a new regulatory framework for the presalt reserves. Included in the legislation were four notable attributes: First, the legislation created a new agency, Pré-Sal Petróleo SA, to administer new presalt production and trading contracts in the oil and natural gas industry. The second component allowed the government to capitalize Petrobras by granting the company 5 billion barrels of unlicensed presalt oil reserves in exchange for a larger ownership share. The other two components established a new development fund to manage government revenues from presalt oil and to lay out a new production-sharing agreement (PSA) system for presalt reserves. In contrast to the concession-based framework for non-presalt oil projects, where companies are largely uninhibited by the state in exploring and producing, Petrobras will be the sole operator of each PSA and will hold a minimum 30% stake in all presalt projects. However, to incentivize companies, the PSA will also include a signing bonus of $6.6 billion and a low-cost recovery cap.
In its first and, thus far, only competitive licensing round (October 2013) for a presalt field, the winning bid was a consortium made up of Petrobras (with 40% stake), Royal Dutch Shell (20%), Total (20%), CNPC (10%), and CNOOC (10%).35
Hit by the global decline in oil prices, high levels of debt (estimated at $110 billion), and the Operation Car Wash scandal, Petrobras is struggling to meet its growth targets. See the Production and Consumption section above for more information on the Operation Car Wash scandal. The proposed offshore oil bill would allow greater private and foreign investment in the development of Brazil's offshore oil blocks. The bill is expected to pass later this year.36
Brazil also has strict local content requirements, which commit companies to source specific percentages of their work force, equipment, and services in Brazil. According to Brazil's oil regulator, the ANP, in the bidding rounds, companies that offer higher percentages of local content have better chances of acquiring the rights to explore an oil block. The weight of the local content offer corresponds to 20% of the final grade given to the company's bid.37
Under the first presalt production-sharing agreement, the government set the local content requirement for the Libra field at 37% in the exploration phase, 55% in the development phase, and 59% after 2022. Currently, oil companies are required to buy as much as 65% of their goods and services from domestic companies. The ambitious local content requirements have come into question over the past few years, however, as many companies have complained that Brazil lacks the domestic capacity to meet these requirements.38 According to the IEA, the highly sophisticated technology and equipment needed for ultra-deepwater fields is often not found in Brazil. Pre-existing bottlenecks stemming from the lack of domestic capacity have been exacerbated by the corruption probe, which has touched several local suppliers.
In addition, Brazil's local content requirements, intended to create jobs in Brazil and build up local supply chains, are the source for cost overruns and project delays that have resulted in oil production declines in 2012 and 2013. Petrobras alone requires more than 50 FPSOs and other production units to meet its production targets, according to Platts.39
Despite calls for change, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said that her government would maintain the rules for production-sharing contracts as well as for Brazil's local content policies.40
Biofuels
To address the country's dependence on oil imports and its surplus of sugar cane, the government implemented policies to encourage ethanol production and consumption beginning in the 1970s.
Total biofuel production in Brazil in 2014 was 16.7 million tons of oil equivalent (Mtoe), a 5.5% increase from 2013.41
Brazil is the second-largest producer and consumer of ethanol in the world after the United States. Ethanol production grew 4% in 2014 compared to 2013, exceeding Brazil's 2010 record level and reaching 492,844 b/d, according to the Empresa de Pesquisa Energética (EPE).42
The Brazilian government raised the ethanol blend requirement in gasoline to 27% in February 2015. The government is now considering an increase to 27.5% as a measure to reduce gasoline imports.43 However, the ethanol industry is struggling, because of land and labor cost increases as well as government-imposed gasoline price controls, which are undermining the competitiveness of ethanol as an oil substitute.
In 2014, Brazil exported 24,125 b/d of ethanol, down 52% compared to 2013.44 Ethanol exports to the United States represented 52% of total Brazilian ethanol exports.45 Africa imported 490,605 barrels (1,344 b/d), a decrease of 39.2% from 2013; Europe imported 141,521 barrels of ethanol (388 b/d), down 88.2% from 2013; and Central and South America imported 37,109 barrels of ethanol (101 b/d), a decrease of 97% from the previous year. The only region that saw an increase in Brazilian ethanol imports from the previous year was the Asia-Pacific, with 3.5 million barrels of ethanol (9,554 b/d), an increase of 9.6% compared to 2013.46
Brazil imported 7,789 b/d of ethanol in 2014 (down 243.2% from 2013), and nearly all imported ethanol came from the United States. Although Brazil is a major ethanol producer, the country also imports ethanol because of several factors. Historically, droughts in Brazil have forced the country to import ethanol, mostly from the United States. Additionally, if sugarcane is not quickly processed into ethanol, the crop is prone to rot. The seasonality of sugarcane harvests leaves Brazil with a January-to-March off-season. In Brazil, ethanol production is also highly sensitive to commodity prices. For example, because sugarcane is used for ethanol production, high sugar prices may entice producers to switch to sugar production instead of ethanol production.
Brazil also produces biodiesel but at smaller quantities. In 2014, the country produced 58,590 b/d of biodiesel, a 17.2% increase from 2013. Soybean oil remained the main raw material for the production of biodiesel, equivalent to about 77% of the total.47 More than 80% of production has been concentrated in the south central region of the country.48 In 2015, Brazil raised the domestic biodiesel mandate from 5% to 7%.49
Natural gas
Although natural gas accounted for 12% of Brazil's total primary energy consumption in 2014,50 the country has the second-largest reserves in South America, located primarily offshore in the Campos Basin.
Sector organization
Petrobras plays a dominant role in all links of the natural gas supply chain. In addition to controlling most of the country's natural gas reserves, the company is responsible for most domestic Brazilian natural gas production and for natural gas imports from Bolivia. Petrobras controls the national transmission network, and it has a stake in 21 of Brazil's 27 state-owned natural gas distribution companies. In the upstream and the midstream sector, Brazil's Ministry of Mines and Energy sets policy, and the ANP is the regulatory authority. In the downstream sector, regulation is overseen by state agencies.
Reserves
EIA estimates that Brazil had 16 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of proved natural gas reserves at the beginning of 2015. The ANP estimates that, at the end of 2014, Brazil had an estimated 16.6 Tcf of proved natural gas reserves, second in South America after Venezuela. About 85% of Brazil's natural gas reserves are located offshore, and 66% of offshore reserves are concentrated off the coast of the state of Rio de Janeiro. The state of Rio de Janeiro increased its percentage of the volume of proved natural gas reserves from 56.1% in 2013 to 58.3% in 2014.51 About 72% of the country's onshore natural gas reserves are located in the state of Amazonas.52
Production and consumption
Along with the potential to significantly increase oil production in the country, the presalt areas are estimated to contain sizable natural gas reserves as well.
In 2014, Brazil produced 1.13 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of natural gas, up 13.2% from 2013. Offshore production accounted for 73.3% of the natural gas produced in Brazil, totaling 826.4 billion cubic feet (Bcf), and onshore production increased by 13.3% and reached 300.2 Bcf. Nearly half of offshore natural gas production is concentrated off the coast of Rio de Janeiro. Regarding onshore natural gas production, the state of Maranhão accounted for 6.2% of the volume produced in 2014, with production at 70.6 Bcf. This production level was mostly because of the development of the ParnaÃba Basin, which holds the largest private field of onshore gas in Brazil.53
Brazil's consumption of natural gas was 1.4 Tcf in 2014, an increase of 6.3% from 2013, with imports from neighboring countries adding to domestic production. Natural gas demand from the industrial sector was 38.9% of the country's total natural gas consumption in 2014.54
Recent announcements about additional natural gas discoveries in Brazil's offshore presalt layer have generated excitement about new natural gas production. Along with the potential to significantly increase oil production in the country, the presalt areas are estimated to contain sizable natural gas reserves as well. Production in the presalt layer reached 222.5 Bcf in 2014, according to ANP.55
Pipelines
Petrobras operates Brazil's domestic natural gas transport system through its subsidiary company Transpetro. The network has more than 7,270 miles of natural gas pipelines,56 predominantly along the southeast and northeast areas of the country, from the state of Rio Grande do Sul to Ceará. For years these systems were not interconnected, which hindered the development of domestic production and consumption. However, in March 2010, the Southeast Northeast Integration Gas Pipeline (GASENE) linked these two markets for the first time. This 860-mile pipeline, which runs from Rio de Janeiro to BahÃa, is the longest pipeline in Brazil.
The other major natural gas market in Brazil is the Amazon region. In 2009, Petrobras completed construction of the Urucu pipeline linking Urucu to Manaus, the capital of Amazonas state. This project is expected to facilitate development of the Amazon's considerable natural gas reserves.
Imports
Brazil imported 614.5 Bcf of natural gas in 2014, a 5.4% increase from 2013. Bolivia was the source of more than 68% of Brazilian natural gas imports.
Brazil imported 614.5 Bcf of natural gas in 2014, a 5.4% increase from 2013, as a result of large increases in domestic natural gas demand. Of this amount, 68% came from Bolivia (via pipeline), and the remainder corresponds to liquefied natural gas (LNG) imports primarily from Nigeria, Qatar, Spain, and Trinidad and Tobago.57
Brazil imports natural gas from Bolivia through two pipelines. The Gasbol pipeline, established in 1999, links Santa Cruz, Bolivia to Corumbá, Brazil and continues to São Paulo, Brazil. The 1,960-mile pipeline has a maximum capacity of 1.1 Bcf per day (Bcf/d).58 The San Matías pipeline (98 million cubic feet per day (Mcf/d)) runs from San José de Chiquitos, Bolivia to San Matías, Brazil, and then connects to the GasOcidente pipeline to supply the Empresa Productora de Energia Ltda power plant in Cuiabá.59
Liquefied natural gas
Brazil has three LNG regasification terminals with a combined capacity of 1.4 Bcf/d: the Pecém terminal in the northeast, the Guanabara Bay terminal in the southeast, and the TRB terminal, which opened in January 2014 in the state of Bahía.60 The facilities are floating regasification and storage units (FRSU). The Pecém received its first LNG cargo from Trinidad and Tobago in July 2008. The Guanabara Bay terminal came online in May 2009.
Brazil re-exported 3.2 Bcf of LNG to Argentina in 2014.61
Electricity
Brazil has the third-largest electricity sector in the Americas, behind the United States and Canada.
Brazil had an installed generating capacity of 134 gigawatts (GW) in 2014, representing a 7.2 GW expansion from 2013, according to the Ministry of Mines and Energy.62 Hydroelectricity accounted for 89.2 GW of generating capacity, fossil fuel sources 25.5 GW, biomass 12.3 GW, and small amounts from wind, nuclear, and solar made up the remainder. Brazil also had 5.9 GW of contracted imports, bringing the total power supply to 139.8 GW.63
Brazil generated 590 billion kilowatthours (kWh) of electricity in 2014.64 Public service power plants accounted for 572 billion kWh, self-producers accounted for 52.2 billion kWh, and the remainder was either traded or accounted for as losses.65
In 2014, final end-use consumption of electricity was 531 billion kWh, an increase of almost 3% from the previous year. The industrial sector accounted for 206 billion kWh, the residential sector consumed 132 billion kWh, and the commercial sector consumed 91 billion kWh.66 Hydroelectric power accounted for 65.2% of total electricity generated in Brazil. Natural gas and oil represented 13% and 6.8%, respectively, and biomass accounted for 7.4%.67
Sector organization
The government plays a substantial role in the Brazilian electricity sector. Until the 1990s, the government controlled the electricity sector almost completely. Brazil initiated an electricity sector privatization process in 1996 that led to the establishment of the National Electric Energy Agency (Aneel). However, when drier-than-average weather led to severe energy shortages in 2000 and 2001, the privatization process stalled. Although the electricity sector was privatized in the early 2000s, the bulk of Brazil's major generation assets remain under government control. Eletrobras, a state-owned holding company, is the dominant player in the electricity market. The government also owns almost the entire electricity transmission network.
In 2004, the Brazilian government implemented a new model for the electricity sector. This hybrid approach to government involvement splits the sector into regulated and unregulated markets for different producers and consumers. This approach allows for both public and private investment in new generation and distribution projects. Under the plan, however, Eletrobras was formally excluded from privatization efforts.
The government removed electricity tariffs for households and businesses in January 2013, but has since reinstated the tariffs following the October 2014 elections.68
Hydroelectricity
Brazil is planning new hydroelectric power projects, such as the Belo Monte plant, which upon completion will be the third-largest hydroelectric power plant in the world.
Brazil generated 373 billion kWh of hydroelectric power in 2014, a decrease of 4.5% from 2013.69 Many of Brazil's hydropower generating facilities are located far from the main demand centers, resulting in high transmission and distribution losses.
The world's largest hydroelectric plant by generation is the 14,000 MW Itaipu hydroelectric dam on the Paraná River, which Brazil operates with Paraguay. According to Itaipu Binacional, the facility generated 87.8 billion kWh of electricity in 2014, a decrease of about 11%.70 Although Brazil plans to move away from hydropower to mitigate the risk of supply shortages as a result of dry weather, new hydro projects continue to move forward. Most notable among these projects is the Belo Monte plant in the Amazon Basin, which upon completion will be the third-largest hydroelectric plant in the world behind China's Three Gorges Dam and the Itaipu Dam.
Nuclear power
Brazil has two nuclear power plants, the 640-megawatt (MW) ANGRA 1 and the 1,350-MW ANGRA 2. State-owned Eletronuclear, a subsidiary of Eletrobras, operates both plants. The ANGRA 1 nuclear power plant began commercial operations in December 1984, and the ANGRA 2 began commercial operations in December 2000. Construction of a third plant, the 1,405-MW Admiral Alvaro Alberto Nuclear Power Station (CNAA), formerly ANGRA 3, started in 1984 and is still under construction. Eletronuclear anticipates that the power plant will enter into commercial operations by May 2018.71 Nuclear power accounted for 1,990 GW of installed generating capacity (1.5% of total) in Brazil in 2014.72
Nuclear power accounted for 15.3 MW of electricity generation, a decrease of 0.5% from the previous year.73 Nuclear energy consumption was 40.7 terrawatt-hours (TWh) in 2014, up 5% from 38.4 TWh in 2013.74
Notes
- Data presented in the text are the most recent available as of October 9, 2015.
- Data are EIA estimates unless otherwise noted.
Endnotes
2BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2015 http://www.bp.com/content/dam/bp/pdf/Energy-economics/statistical-review-2015/bp-statistical-review-of-world-energy-2015-full-report.pdf
3MME, "Resenha Energética Brasileira: ExercÃcio de 2014." http://www.mme.gov.br/documents/10584/1143612/03+-+Resenha+Energ%C3%A9tica+Brasileira+2015+-+Ano+Base+2014+%28PDF%29/86517179-b810-4249-b14a-b488beee85f7?version=1.1
4Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
5Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
6Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
7Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
8Petrobras, "Oil and Natural Gas Production Up in July," August 19, 2015. http://www.petrobras.com.br/en/news/oil-and-natural-gas-production-up-in-july.htm.
9Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
10Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
11EIA, "Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO)," July 2015. http://www.eia.gov/forecasts/steo/pdf/steo_full.pdf.
12IHS Energy. "Petrobras Stepping Away from 'Aspirational' Targets," July 20, 2015.
13Petrobras, "2015-2019 Business and Management Plan," http://www.investidorpetrobras.com.br/en/presentations/business-management-plan.
14IHS Energy, "Latin America Downstream Markets Outlook," May 29, 2015.
15Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
16IHS Energy, "Latin America Downstream Markets Outlook," May 29, 2015.
17Petrobras, Management Report 2014, April 2015. http://www.investidorpetrobras.com.br/en/annual-reports/report-administration.
18Rittner, Daniel and Ulhoa, Raquel, "Foster diz que rebaixamento da Petrobras pela Moody´s será superado," Valor Economico (October 7, 2013), http://www.valor.com.br/empresas/3296250/foster-diz-que-rebaixamento-da-petrobras-pela-moody.
19IEA, "Medium-Term Oil Market Report," February 2015.
20Petrobras, Management Report 2014, April 2015. http://www.investidorpetrobras.com.br/en/annual-reports/report-administration.
21Petrobras, "2015-2019 Business and Management Plan." http://www.investidorpetrobras.com.br/en/presentations/business-management-plan.
22Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
23Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
24Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
25Orihuela, Rodrigo and Godoy, Denyse, "Petrobras Falls as Brazil Fails to Phase Out Fuel Subsidy," Bloomberg (December 2, 2013), http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-12-02/petrobras-fuel-price-increase-puts-limit-on-subsidy.html.
26Blount, Jeb, "Analysis: Petrobras Fuel Woes Make Brazil Dependent on U.S., India," Reuters (January 22, 2014), http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/01/23/us-brazil-refining-analysis-idUSBREA0M04I20140123.
27Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
28Global Trade Information Services (GTIS).
29Empresa de Pesquisa Energética, "Balanço Energético Nacional 2015," April 2015.
30Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
31Petrobras, "Petrobras 2030 Strategic Plan Surplus Volumes of Transfer of Rights," (June 27, 2014) http://www.investidorpetrobras.com.br/en/presentations/presentation-to-analysts-surplus-volumes-of-transfer-of-rights-ceo-maria-das-gracas-silva-foster.htm.
32Agencia EFE, "Brazil's Petrobras Confirms High-Quality Find at Pre-Salt Field" (November 20, 2013).
33Oil and Gas Journal, "Petrobras Completes Exploration Well in TOR Area of Santos Basin" (May 9, 2014), http://www.ogj.com/articles/2014/05/petrobras-completes-exploration-well-in-tor-area-of-santos-basin.html.
34Upstream Magazine, " 'Satisfactory' Number Apply for Bid Round," August 28, 2015.
35Petrobras, "Libra Auction Results," (2014) http://www.petrobras.com/en/magazine/post/libra-auction-result.htm.
36Leahy, Joe. "Brazil to Ease Petrobras Pressure with Offshore Oil Bill," Financial Times, July 5, 2015, http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/fc8c8ade-21d2-11e5-aa5a-398b2169cf79.html#axzz3fVps8Brn
37Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, http://www.anp.gov.br/?id=554
38Leahy, Joe. "Local Supply Policy Tests Petrobras," Financial Times, March 13, 2012, http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/a2f51e12-60ad-11e1-84dd-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3fxlshHdy
39Platts, "Global Energy Outlook 2014," December 2013. https://www.platts.com/IM.Platts.Content/insightanalysis/insightmagazine/2013/insight_gea2013_lowres.pdf
40Blount, Jeb. "Brazil President Says to Maintain Oil Rules, National Content," Reuters, May 14, 2014 http://uk.reuters.com/article/2015/05/14/brazil-petrobras-policy-content-idUKL1N0Y520420150514
42Empresa de Pesquisa Energética http://www.epe.gov.br/Petroleo/Paginas/Produ%C3%A7%C3%A3odeetanolcrescepelo3%C2%BAanoconsecutivoebaterecorde.aspx
43Goy, Leonardo, "Brazil to Test Higher Ethanol Requirement in Gasoline-Source," Reuters (June 18, 2014), http://in.reuters.com/article/2014/06/18/brazil-biofuels-idINL2N0OZ0OC20140618.
44Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
45Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
46Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
47Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
48Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
49IEA, "Medium-Term Oil Report," February 2015.
50BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2015 http://www.bp.com/content/dam/bp/pdf/Energy-economics/statistical-review-2015/bp-statistical-review-of-world-energy-2015-full-report.pdf
51Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
52Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
53Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
54Economist Intelligence Unit, Energy Report: Brazil, May 31, 2015.
55Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
56Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
57Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
58Ministry of Mines and Energy, "Boletim Mensal de Acompanhamento da Indústria de Gás Natural," (October 2014) http://www.mme.gov.br/spg/menu/publicacoes.html
59GasOriente Boliviano, "GasOriente Boliviano," http://gasorienteboliviano.com/espanol/company/company.html.
60Ministry of Mines and Energy, "Boletim Mensal de Acompanhamento da Indústria de Gás Natural," (October 2014) http://www.mme.gov.br/spg/menu/publicacoes.html.
61Agência Nacional do Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, "Oil, Natural Gas, and Biofuels Statistical Yearbook 2015" (2015).
62MME, "Resenha Energética Brasileira: Exercício de 2014." http://www.mme.gov.br/documents/10584/1143612/03+-+Resenha+Energ%C3%A9tica+Brasileira+2015+-+Ano+Base+2014+%28PDF%29/86517179-b810-4249-b14a-b488beee85f7?version=1.1
63MME, "Resenha Energética Brasileira: Exercício de 2014." http://www.mme.gov.br/documents/10584/1143612/03+-+Resenha+Energ%C3%A9tica+Brasileira+2015+-+Ano+Base+2014+%28PDF%29/86517179-b810-4249-b14a-b488beee85f7?version=1.1
64MME, "Resenha Energética Brasileira: Exercício de 2014." http://www.mme.gov.br/documents/10584/1143612/03+-+Resenha+Energ%C3%A9tica+Brasileira+2015+-+Ano+Base+2014+%28PDF%29/86517179-b810-4249-b14a-b488beee85f7?version=1.1
65MME, "Resenha Energética Brasileira: Exercício de 2014." http://www.mme.gov.br/documents/10584/1143612/03+-+Resenha+Energ%C3%A9tica+Brasileira+2015+-+Ano+Base+2014+%28PDF%29/86517179-b810-4249-b14a-b488beee85f7?version=1.1
66Empresa de Pesquisa Energética, "Balanço Energético Nacional 2015," April 2015.
67Empresa de Pesquisa Energética, "Balanço Energético Nacional 2015," April 2015.
68Economist Intelligence Unit, Energy Report: Brazil, May 31, 2015.
69MME, "Resenha Energética Brasileira: Exercício de 2014." http://www.mme.gov.br/documents/10584/1143612/03+-+Resenha+Energ%C3%A9tica+Brasileira+2015+-+Ano+Base+2014+%28PDF%29/86517179-b810-4249-b14a-b488beee85f7?version=1.1
70Itaipu Binacional, "Production from Year to Year," http://www.itaipu.gov.br/en/energy/production-year-year.
71Eletrobras Eletronuclear, "Angra 3: energia para o crescimento do país," http://www.eletronuclear.gov.br/AEmpresa/CentralNuclear/Angra3.aspx.
72MME, "Resenha Energética Brasileira: Exercício de 2014." http://www.mme.gov.br/documents/10584/1143612/03+-+Resenha+Energ%C3%A9tica+Brasileira+2015+-+Ano+Base+2014+%28PDF%29/86517179-b810-4249-b14a-b488beee85f7?version=1.1
73Empresa de Pesquisa Energética, "Balanço Energético Nacional 2015," April 2015.
74BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2015, http://www.bp.com/content/dam/bp/pdf/Energy-economics/statistical-review-2015/bp-statistical-review-of-world-energy-2015-full-report.pdf
Project Feedback
Read what others are saying about this project.
01/18/2017 - District of Columbia, United States
Clicking on the first graphic on this page zooms in way too much (the height of the graphic is 3x the size of the pop-up) and only the vertical scroll bar works. http://www.eia.gov/beta/international/regions-topics.cfm?RegionTopicID=CSR#
12/19/2016 - China
Where can I find the previous function that could enable to view and download selected data in tables ? Thanks.
12/01/2016 - Italy
First of all, congrats for this huge and helpful dataset!Secondly, how can I recover the data for Biodiesel production and see them in the chart/table? The Source button seem not to do any changes.. Thanks a lot again
11/28/2016 - Colombia
It would be easier, if when using metric units, instead of writing "billion kWh" you would specify whether this is 10^9 (as in english speaking countries) or 10^12 (everywhere else). Am I correct to assume 1 billion kW equal 1 GW?
11/19/2016 - Missouri, United States
International energy - consumption per capita years 2010 and 2011 seem wildly out of line with the previous years. US goes for 308 to 69,595 in 2010? Seems incorrect
11/11/2016 - Indiana, United States
I very much liked the previous version where excel downloaded data was much easier to work with. With this new version and the way it generates excel files when we download data, it takes me a huge amount of time to effectively use a downloaded file.
11/11/2016 - Virginia, United States
Per capita consumption data for 2011 by continent is coming up strangely. For global consumption of 529 Quad BTUs, it's showing per capita 9.5 trillion BTUs (which would assume a world pop. ~56,000).
11/02/2016 - India
Hi, great work with the interface. However, there are parts of the database that we could access in the previous version, that we are unable to access here (Imports and exports of petroleum crude and products, consumption of renewable energy in QTBTU among others). It would be great if these issues were cleared up asap so as to improve usability and access to data. Thank you!
10/24/2016 - India
Hi, We are unable to download crude oil and refined petroleum products imports by country. Kindly help.
10/13/2016 - Iran
Can you please create new links for your new things? I just saved a link for total renewable electricity net consumption, every time I just use this link address, but this time because of your update, it was not found. It makes me confused, I need this data in excel format, I search all of your website, I did not find this variable data/
10/11/2016 - New York, United States
The old system to download data was much easier - why fix something that worked well. I saw a comment that person can download all countries - I can not find that. Can you please direct me to it - thanks
10/01/2016 - Texas, United States
I'm just curious why the data period ends at 2013 - it's now Oct 2016 - seems like there should be data at least thru 2015. Has the beta site been replaced? Am I just in the wrong place?
09/28/2016 - Japan
I'm using the data for elec. generation (e.g. PV or wind) for my own research. Before this version, the data were down to 3 to 4 decimal places. However, only 1 decimal seems to be shown in Beta. It would be more useful and helpful for research if some options for more decimal place were added or units could be modified (e.g. other than billion kWh for generation). Thanks.
09/13/2016 - Norway
Hi, this gives me a very interesting picture of the global energy sector. Thank you.
08/29/2016 - Texas, United States
The organization of downloaded CSV data makes the data almost unusable. All headers for each country are shown as having equal value to the country itself so the data cannot be sorted without losing the country identification. I downloaded All Countries>Crude Oil and Lease Condensate Production. Column B makes every heading equal i.e., the country and various information headings. It is unfortunate that a download cannot be directly used but it is frustrating that as an expert Excel user I cannot easily determine a way to organize the data in a way that makes it usable. Thanks, Art Berman
08/16/2016 - Texas, United States
Really helpful and easy to use.
08/12/2016 - United Kingdom
Excellent. This is much easier to navigate and use.
07/27/2016 - Brazil
Excelent job! What does the "other liquids" in Total Petroleum and Other Liquids Production 2015 include?
07/18/2016 - India
Very useful data. However, it would be great if you could mention how much of India's energy (especially oil and gas) imports come by sea, in order to get a clearer picture of India's energy imports.
06/23/2016 - United Kingdom
I was using your import figures for china i.e. the pie chart for percentage world wide imports 2014 and when added up it is 99% rather than 100.
06/22/2016 - Japan
More new information will be helpful to understand global enegy situation.
06/15/2016 - Ecuador
Srs, I am probably one of the thousands readers that are eager to learn of the new information produced by EIA. Excellent, by the way. OPEC report on revenue is very informative. Our governments always keep us in the dark. Why???. Thank you
06/07/2016 - United Kingdom
Amazing data, thank you very much!
05/25/2016 - China
Very helpful information!! Well researched, clear figures and graphs.
05/18/2016 - California, United States
There is no data available for the petroleum or natural gas reserves in the U.S.A.
05/01/2016 - Australia
It is incredibly frustrating trying to view the data you want. Today I simply want to view the imports of crude oil in bbld in South Africa. BTU is a completely unhelpful metric.
04/22/2016 - California, United States
2014?? Where are the production numbers of 2015 and up 4/22/16?
04/03/2016 - United Kingdom
Fantastic resource. Very well researched, clear and easy figures and graphs. Well organised too. Incredible useful!
03/08/2016 - District of Columbia, United States
What a handy tool, thanks!
03/06/2016 - New Jersey, United States
Well organized information with easy access.
02/15/2016 - West Virginia, United States
Very helpful information!
02/14/2016 - China
I like the old version which had a country brief.
02/09/2016 - Saudi Arabia
Excellent work for the country analysis. However, i'm struggling to cite the South African country analysis report....would appreciate if you could sent it
01/30/2016 - Spain
Your website is very useful for me as a teacher, particularly the world thematic maps. My students like it as well. Thanks a lot!
01/22/2016 - Vietnam
Useful data for my work. Thanks sincerely.
01/04/2016 - Canada
Best government website ever
01/02/2016 - Turkey
Goood
12/29/2015 - Michigan, United States
We use your 'Total Electricity Net Consumption' data for comparing countries for a market potential index we create each year. Data in the previous years was available up to 5 decimal places. However, data is available with only 1 decimal place this year (through the beta interface) and comparing countries became a challenge because there are too many countries with the same values now. Is there a way to download the full data-set with all the decimal points available?
12/22/2015 - United Kingdom
Brilliant bit of website, made my life a thousand times easier!
12/06/2015 - Argentina
Excellent!!
11/29/2015 - Malaysia
May I know if there is a latest write up on Malaysia year 2015. The one I have obtained is 2014.
11/21/2015 - Virginia, United States
Terrific article on Brazil...thank you.
11/20/2015 - Egypt
I note that the analysis of energy in Israel in this site is not covered in details as other countries?
11/17/2015 - Michigan, United States
Great PDF file on Canada's energy and trade success! Exactly what I needed to bring me up to speed for my research on Michigan and on the Midwest - thanks! (Mike at McGuire Research)
11/15/2015 - California, United States
Why are your maps so hard to copy and past? It should be easy to get a nice graph of yours.
11/12/2015 - Alabama, United States
I work with Excel spreadsheets. I looked at your Excel download function and examined your Excel spreadsheet. It appears that if I am going to load the data into my spreadsheets, I will have to do one line at a time, each country individualy.
10/06/2015 - United Kingdom
The analysis on South Korea was a very interesting and worthwhile read. Great to see such an informed analysis presented with tables to illustrate it
09/30/2015 - France
Excellent interface, very very efficient. Having global data is definitely a plus. Too bad data goes up to 2012 and does not include 2013 and 2014. Comments coming from an IT manager used to major systems with large databases.
09/12/2015 - India
I always rely on data published by EIA to make various comparisons and analysis reports. This tool makes my job much easier.
09/11/2015 - Russia
Amazing tool, thank you for such a useful application for data export .
08/16/2015 - Colorado, United States
So... Pretty! Really appreciate you guys going the extra mile with your data tools, this makes my research so much more effective. You guys have been an utter joy to work with (not a typical experience for government bureaucracy), and this new beta is the icing on the cake. Thanks for the hard work you have put in to make this information clear and understandable! Looking forward to seeing what you guys cook up in the future.
06/09/2015 - District of Columbia, United States
Why can't I download any of this to spreadsheets? Why can't I download multiple years?
06/01/2015 - Nigeria
Dear Sirs, I have been using your data for almost 20 yrs, in particular the international Petroleum data. I like the granularity provided, by country by month. Unfortunately it seems from the beta site, that I can only access the annual data and only download as a CSV file. Is that correct? regards Casper
05/31/2015 - Virginia, United States
Where are the country pages!!!? I am writing a book chapter and referenced your site, where I found terrific info on India and Japan several months ago. Unfortunately, it appears you deleted those pages. Why?
05/27/2015 - Antarctica
I really love this beautiful webpage! It is very wonderful:) I love learning about this stuff!
05/25/2015 -
I need to access country profiles in .pdf form.
05/20/2015 - New York, United States
Thank you for all the info and help over the past few years. Before the layout, I was able to find annual #s of net exports of petro for each country, and now I have no idea where it is.
05/20/2015 - New York, United States
I am looking for bbl and bcf , not Btu , can you tell me where to look for country's oil bbl and gas in bcf? Thanks
05/20/2015 - Canada
Where can I find the original spreadsheets with the country data for Crude + Condensate and the one for all liquids. The new look is too complicated for me. The spreadsheet is more easily used for good analysis.
05/19/2015 - Texas, United States
Would like a link to the pdf of the entire country analysis brief.