Brazil talks about energy transition — and, curiously enough, is making one. It just prefers to start with oil. The National Petroleum Agency (ANP) has added 275 new exploratory blocks and five marginal areas to its Permanent Concession Offer (OPC), expanding the country’s oil map amid a global debate over fossil fuel phase-outs. It is a transition, Brazilian-style: pragmatic, gradual, and firmly grounded — preferably in the pre-salt.

The equatorial margin, still awaiting an environmental license, has become a symbol of that delicate balance. But other frontiers are already taking shape: Barreirinhas, Pará-Maranhão, Jatobá, Pelotas. Each carries the promise of new production hubs and the dream of extended energy sovereignty. The goal is clear — to offset the decline of mature basins without surrendering revenue or self-sufficiency.
The challenge is less environmental than operational. Licensing, investing, and producing before oil loses value demand a nimble state — and patient investors. The ANP is betting it can do both: explore responsibly while planning the transition. The official rhetoric has mastered the climate vocabulary, even if the timeline runs on a different clock.
Brazil is not ignoring the future. It just insists on reaching it fully fueled. If the transition is inevitable, it might as well arrive with full tanks.
Read more: What comes after the Equatorial Margin





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