Brazilian state-run oil firm Petrobras has racked up BRL180 million ($33.7 million) in costs to keep a drillship on standby in the Foz do Amazonas basin, a company source and a local union said, as it awaits a regulator's decision on a drilling request.
The NS-42 drillship arrived in August at its designated location off the coast of Amapa state, in northern Brazil, and has a daily cost of BRL4 million ($748,433), according to the Brazilian oil workers' federation FUP and the source.
Petrobras used the ship in an emergency response simulation carried out in August, as it seeks to obtain a licence with Brazilian environmental agency Ibama to drill in the region, which is ecologically sensitive and also seen as the company’s most promising oil frontier.
Ibama said in September it had approved the drill’s results but requested adjustments from Petrobras before issuing a final decision.
The cost of BRL180 million includes only the rent of the drillship, the source from Petrobras said, adding it excludes personnel costs.
The August simulation mobilised Petrobras’ largest-ever response structure, involving over 400 people, large vessels, and aircraft. It aimed to demonstrate how the firm would handle a potential oil spill in the environmentally sensitive region.
Petrobras said in a statement it expects to receive the environmental licence “soon,” while Ibama said it is still reviewing Petrobras’ recent submissions and did not provide a deadline.
The situation echoes a previous episode in 2022–2023, when Petrobras stationed a drillship in the same region for months. At the time, the company was waiting for Ibama’s approval to conduct a simulation drill, which never took place.
(Reporting by Marta Nogueira in Rio de Janeiro; Writing by Fernando Cardoso; Editing by Matthew Lewis)