NOGUCHI, Alexandre.; NOBRE, Farley Simon Mendes.
Resumo:
Oil and gas companies have been reinventing themselves, preparing for a future where their old
business model will not fit. Companies like Shell, Equinor, Total, and bp have all included
renewables in their portfolios in the past few years. This kind of market change is motivated
and very dependent on appropriate public policies, like feed-in tariffs and subsidies, which can
influence the speed and the direction of an energy transition toward renewables. While most
studies about the adoption of renewables by oil companies are from developed countries, the
authors have found very few publications about this theme in Brazil, especially involving public
policies. Studies for developed countries usually consider an energy transition to reduce oil and
gas activity and increase renewables and electrification, but this strategy may not suit Brazil.
Brazil already has a large share of renewables in its energy matrix, it has serious social issues,
and most of its GHG emissions come from forestry and land-use change. As such, research on
the specific case of Brazil is needed. This work aims to understand how public policies in Brazil
favor or hinder the adoption of renewables by oil companies and the reduction of efforts in the
exploration and production of oil and gas. Through documentary research and interviews of oil
and gas professionals, this article analyses the activity and plans of the seven larger oilproducing
companies in Brazil and how the public policies influence these companies toward
a transition to renewables and a reduction in the oil and gas activity. We analyze the Brazilian
energy public policies according to the policy mix conceptual framework proposed by Rogge
and Reichardt (2016). As a result, the authors show that though some oil companies in Brazil
have made significant renewables investments, their current focus will still be oil and gas in the
following years. The authors show the main existing barriers for these companies to adopt
renewables. They also make recommendations for Brazil’s energy policy mix to facilitate and
boost a transition towards low-carbon energy system.