世界石油


(彭博社)“巴西国有石油公司 Petroleo Brasileiro SA (Petrobras) 总统路易斯·伊纳西奥·卢拉·达席尔瓦 (Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva) 因股息支付纠纷而解雇了首席执行官让·保罗·普拉特斯 (Jean Paul Prates),导致该公司股价下跌。

周二晚间,知情人士证实了普拉特斯被解雇的消息,因讨论私人事务而要求匿名。巴西国家石油公司(该公司众所周知)在周二晚间的一份声明中表示,预计普拉特斯将在即将召开的董事会会议上正式辞职。

据另一位知情人士透露,总统卢拉计划提名巴西石油和天然气监管机构前负责人玛格达·尚布里亚尔 (Magda Chambriard) 接替普拉特斯。巴西国家石油公司证实,能源部已提名她担任首席执行官。

普拉特斯的离开结束了数月来有关他执掌巴西国家石油公司的日子屈指可数的猜测。今年早些时候,当他拒绝与政府任命的董事会成员保持一致时,紧张局势升级,这些成员投票决定停止向已经习惯了稳定回报的股东支付特别股息。

这次解雇可能会加剧人们的担忧,即总部位于里约热内卢的巴西国家石油公司正面临来自执政工人党越来越大的压力,要求其以牺牲股东利益为代价,帮助重振巴西工业并创造就业机会。这一股息戏剧震惊了一些投资者,他们认为这是对拉丁美洲最大石油生产国政治干预日益加强的迹象。

经过数周的辩论,巴西国家石油公司最终批准按照普拉特斯执行董事会最初的提议,通过特别股息将一半可用现金返还给投资者。政府是最大股东,在支出增加之际,股息有助于支撑财政赤字。

普拉特斯在正式宣布之前告诉执行董事会,卢拉已要求恢复他的职位。在彭博社看到的一条消息中,他表示自己的使命“过早终止”,并指责与他发生冲突的能源和矿业部长亚历山大·西尔维拉以及卢拉的幕僚长鲁伊·科斯塔。

普拉特斯是卢拉左翼政党的前参议员,曾在石油行业工作过,在卢拉重新担任总统后不久,他于 2023 年 1 月成为首席执行官。从 2019 年到普拉特斯上任之前,巴西国家石油公司已经更换了六位首席执行官,其中包括临时首席执行官。

在他的领导下,巴西国家石油公司改变了方向,停止了资产出售,保护消费者免受全球油价大幅波动的影响,并拨出数十亿美元用于能源转型投资。该公司最近将其五年业务计划的预算提高至 1020 亿美元,这是自 2015 年以来最大的支出计划。

巴西国家石油公司表示,周二晚间收到能源部的通知,确认将提议 Chambriard 接替普拉特斯。

这位工程师于 1980 年在巴西国家石油公司 (Petrobras) 开始了她的职业生涯,在该公司工作了 22 年,之后转到巴西石油监管机构 Agncia Nacional de Petroleo(G谩s 的天然生物燃烧锚栓,称为 ANP)。 2012年,她被巴西前总统迪尔玛·罗塞夫任命为该机构负责人,并任职至2016年。

和普拉特斯一样,尚布里亚尔也是卢拉 2022 年能源过渡团队的成员。当时,她已经被确定为巴西国家石油公司最高职位的可能候选人。这位前 ANP 负责人为巴西在新地区勘探石油的必要性进行了辩护,其中包括赤道边缘和佩洛塔斯盆地。

“盐下繁荣已经结束。现在是寻找新领域的时候了,这样巴西才能继续生产石油,”她在 12 月接受彭博社采访时说道。

尚布里亚还支持对国内炼油进行更多投资,并希望看到更多商品在巴西加工,而不是作为原材料出口。

花旗集团在一份报告中表示,普拉特斯的下台标志着巴西石油公司治理的恶化,而尚布里亚尔的使命将不会轻松。报告称,她“面临着完成投资计划和加速巴西国家石油公司资本支出扩张的压力”,这可能会导致股息支付减少。

 

主要图片(来源:世界石油)


原文链接/OilandGas360

World Oil


(Bloomberg) – Shares of Brazil’s state-owned oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA (Petrobras) declined after President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva fired Chief Executive Officer Jean Paul Prates following a dispute over dividend payments.

Prates’s dismissal was confirmed late Tuesday by people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. Petrobras, as the company is commonly known, said in a statement late Tuesday that Prates is expected to officially resign at an upcoming board meeting.

Lula, as the president is known, plans to nominate Magda Chambriard, the former head of Brazil’s oil and gas regulator, to replace Prates, according to another person familiar with the matter. Petrobras confirmed that the Energy Ministry had proposed her for CEO.

Prates’s departure brings to an end months of speculation that his days at the helm of Petrobras were numbered. Tensions escalated earlier this year when he refused to align himself with government-appointed board members who voted to withhold the payout of extraordinary dividends to shareholders who’d grown used to steady returns.

The firing may add to concern that Rio de Janeiro-based Petrobras is coming under increasing pressure from the ruling Workers’ Party to help revive Brazilian industry and create jobs, at the expense of shareholders. The dividend drama shocked some investors who viewed it as a sign of growing political interference in Latin America’s top oil-producing nation.

After weeks of debate, Petrobras ultimately approved returning half its available cash to investors through a special dividend, as Prates’s executive board had initially proposed. The government is the biggest shareholder, and the dividends have helped shore up a fiscal deficit at a time spending is on the rise.

Prates told the executive board before the official announcement that Lula had asked for his position back. In a message seen by Bloomberg, he said that his mission was “prematurely cut short,” blaming Alexandre Silveira, the energy and mines minister, and Rui Costa, Lula’s chief of staff, with whom he had clashed.

A former senator for Lula’s left-wing party with a history of working in the oil industry, Prates became chief executive in January 2023, shortly after Lula reassumed the presidency. Petrobras had burned through six CEOs, including interim ones, from 2019 until Prates’s appointment.

Under his leadership, Petrobras changed direction, halting asset sales, shielding consumers from sharp fluctuations in global oil prices and earmarking billions of dollars for energy transition investments. The company recently boosted the budget for its five-year business plan to $102 billion, its biggest spending plan since 2015.

Petrobras said it received a notice from the Energy Ministry late on Tuesday confirming that it would propose Chambriard to replace Prates.

The engineer started her career at Petrobras in 1980, working at the company for 22 years, before moving to Brazilian oil regulator Agência Nacional de Petróleo, Gás natural e Biocombustíveis, known as ANP. She was appointed head of the agency by former Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff in 2012 and held the position until 2016.

Like Prates, Chambriard was part of Lula’s transition team for energy in 2022. At that time, she had already been identified as a possible candidate for Petrobras’s top job. The former ANP head has defended the need for Brazil to explore for oil in new areas, including the Equatorial Margin and the Pelotas basin.

“The pre-salt boom is over. It’s time to look for new frontiers, so Brazil can keep producing oil,” she told Bloomberg in an interview in December.

Chambriard also backs more investment in domestic oil refining, and wants to see more commodities processed in Brazil rather than exported as raw materials.

The ousting of Prates marks a deterioration in Petrobras’s governance, and Chambriard’s mission won’t be easy, Citigroup Inc. said in a note. She “arrives with the pressure to fulfill the investment plan and accelerate Petrobras’s capex expansion” and this may result in lower dividend payments, it said.

 

Lead image (Credit: World Oil)