A consortium of Canada’s Enbridge Inc., Belgium’s Fluxys and U.S. private equity firm EIG Global Energy Partners has submitted a non-binding offer for Brazil’s largest natural gas import pipeline, three people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
Petrobras or Petroleo Brasileiro SA, as Brazil’s state-run oil company is formally known, put its stakes in the 2,593-km (1,611-mile) TBG pipeline, which imports gas from Bolivia, and the far southern TSB pipeline up for sale in December. Non-binding offers were due by late April.
The consortium is preparing to submit a binding offer by the July 5 deadline, said the sources, who requested anonymity to discuss private matters. It was not clear if there were competing bids for the assets, which are expected to fetch billions of dollars.
If the consortium is ultimately successful, it would mark Enbridge’s first foray into South America. The Calgary, Alberta-based company moves about 25% of crude produced in North America and nearly 20% of natural gas consumed in the U.S., according to its website.
Enbridge said in a statement that it does not “respond to market speculation or rumors.” Petrobras, EIG and Fluxys did not respond to requests for comment.
It would also mark a significant step forward in the ongoing drive at Petrobras to divest non-core assets in order to reduce its debt load and sharpen its focus on deepwater oil production.
Petrobras has already sold its stake in the TAG and NTS gas pipeline units to consortia led by Engie SA and Brookfield Asset Management Inc., respectively.
Petrobras sold its 90% stake in TAG for $8.6 billion in 2019. However, TBG and TSB are smaller assets, with their combined transport capacity slightly less than half that of TAG, according to documents released by Petrobras. Petrobras holds 51% of TBG and 25% of TSB.
While Petrobras had a near monopoly in natural gas in Brazil until 2015, it has since been selling assets, in a move bringing private-sector competition and dramatic changes to the market.
Bolivian gas has faced increasing competition in Brazil from cheaper LNG imported by ship.
TBG, formally Transportadora Brasileira Gasoduto Bolivia-Brasil, manages the Brazilian side of the pipeline known as the Gasbol. TBG passes through five southern states, including Sao Paulo, the wealthiest and most populous.
TSB, formally Transportadora Sulbrasileira de Gas, is a far smaller asset—50 km—managing two pipelines in Rio Grande do Sul, which borders Argentina and Uruguay.
Fluxys already holds a minority stake in TBG, which gives it a right of first refusal in the asset, according to the sources consulted by Reuters.
The Belgian natural gas infrastructure group announced in January it had purchased EIG’s 27.5% stake in TBG. At the time, EIG said the sale removed regulatory obstacles to a potential bid for the controlling stake held by Petrobras.
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