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Brazil to triple price it pays Paraguay for energy
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 25 - 07 - 2009


Brazil agreed on Saturday to
triple the amount it pays Paraguay for energy from the massive
Itaipu hydroelectric dam on their border, ending a long-running
dispute that had soured relations between the two neighbors, Reuters reported.
Paraguay also won the right to gradually sell excess energy
from the dam directly to the Brazilian market instead of doing
so exclusively through state-owned power utility Eletrobras.
That move will allow Paraguay to fetch more for the power
at market prices.
The deal is a much-needed political victory for Paraguayan
President Fernando Lugo, whose first year in office has been
marked by a severe economic downturn and scandals over
revelations he fathered children when he was a Roman Catholic
bishop.
But the agreement is likely to face criticism in Brazil,
where opposition leaders and even some government allies have
urged President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to play tough with
Paraguay.
Lugo swept into office in August last year after promising
to extract better terms from Brazil over the energy it sells
from Itaipu. His victory ended a 60-year stronghold on power by
Paraguay's conservative Colorado Party.
Lugo and Lula said the deal would usher in a new era of
relations between the two countries based on cooperation
instead of recriminations over who benefits most from Itaipu.
WIN-WIN DEAL
Lula said the agreement is part of a campaign by Brazil to
spur economic development in the region.
"Brazil is not interested in growing and developing if our
neighbors aren't growing and developing at the same time," Lula
said at a ceremony with Lugo at the presidential palace in
Asuncion, Paraguay's capital.
"This is not an agreement in which one side wins and the
other side loses," Lugo said. "This is for the good of both
countries."
Lugo had initially pushed to renegotiate the 1973 treaty
that laid the foundations for Itaipu, which straddles their
border along the Parana River. But Brazil pushed for a
compromise that would allow Paraguay to boost its take from the
dam.
Brazil gets close to 20 percent of its energy from Itaipu,
paying Paraguay about $120 million a year, an amount that will
now triple. Each country owns half of the 14,000 megawatts the
dam produces annually, but Paraguay consumes just 5 percent of
that amount and sells the rest of its share to Eletrobras for
$45 per megawatt hour.
Paraguay will eventually be allowed to sell a growing share
of that excess energy directly to the Brazilian power market,
where it could fetch as much as $65 per megawatt hour under
current market prices.
The deal gave negotiators 60 days to work out a timeline
and the terms at which that excess energy will be sold on the
Brazilian market. It also stipulated that Brazil and Paraguay
could begin selling excess power from Itaipu to other countries
in 2023, when the Itaipu treaty expires.


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