All It’s Missing Is Congress Approval for Paraguay to Get Brazil’s Money

Itaipu hydroelectric By an ample majority, the Paraguayan Senate approved an agreement with Brazil which will give Paraguay a higher financial compensation from Itaipu, the world's largest operational hydroelectric dam. The question has been a decades-long standing claim which was addressed in several summits between Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his Paraguayan counterpart Fernando Lugo.

The agreement was finally reached last July in Asunción and now must be approved by the Brazilian congress before it becomes effective. According to the new conditions Brazil will pay Paraguay US$ 360 million (three times the current figure) for its share of surplus energy from the Itaipu dam, which is totally absorbed by Brazil under a standing contract clause.

As part of the deal Brazil is also committed to finance major power lines and transport infrastructure connecting Itaipu with Asuncion to the tune of US$ 450 million and in a near future Paraguay will be able to sell part of its surplus power in the Brazilian spot market. Currently it is all purchased by a Brazilian government public utility company.

A Paraguayan Brazilian committee will be in charge of working out the details for the transition from an only client to the spot market and eventually to third countries.

Itaipu the world's largest operational hydroelectric dam jointly managed by the two neighboring countries has long been a source of irritation for Paraguay.

Brazil insists in paying for the surplus energy prices from the seventies, when the dam was built, and under contract clauses can only be traded among partners. Since Paraguay only uses 5% of its half the rest is sold to Latin America's largest economy.

Brazil claims Paraguay never paid its share of the construction costs and therefore has a huge debt from then which it must address.

For the industrial hub of Brazil, metropolitan Sao Paulo, cheap power from Paraguay and cheap natural gas from landlocked Bolivia have been a significant factor in their costs' equation.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Agribusiness Exports Make Up 38% of All Brazilian Exports

Brazil's agribusiness posted an accumulated growth rate of 2.81% in the first quarter this ...

Accusations Are Pure Fantasy Says Brazil’s Finance Minister

"There was no money from Cuba in President Lula’s campaign," the Brazilian Minister of ...

Brazilian Prison Gang Frees Reporter 24 Hours After Their Video is Shown on TV

A Brazilian reporter working for Globo, Brazil’s leading television network, has been freed nearly ...

With Meals at 43 Cents Brazil’s Community Restaurants Are a Hit

The Brazilian government plans to inaugurate seven more community restaurants by the end of ...

For Brazil, US and EU Subsidies Can Only Be Dealt With at the WTO

Despite the absence of favorable prospects for the upcoming Doha Round negotiations, the Brazilian ...

Havana Threats Against Their Families Made Boxers Give Up Defecting in Brazil

Cuban boxers Guillermo Rigondeaux, 26, and Erislandy Lara, 24,both world champions, changed their mind ...

Brazil’s Car Salon Celebrates Off-Road Machines

Over 500,000 Brazilian and foreign visitors should visit the 23rd Edition of the São ...

Brazil Is Too Good of a Target to Be Without the A-Bomb

Brazil should develop the technological capacity to manufacture nuclear weapons, one of the country’s ...

Brazil Pitches In at Community of Democracies

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, went to the Chilean capital, Santiago, ...

“Down in Brazil,” with American Jazz-Pop Vocalist Michael Franks

Poor Michael Franks. He gets no respect, no respect at all from jazz purists. ...