Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Bharat Petroleum and Videocon consortium strike offshore oil in Brazil - November 2009


The consortium has discovered additional oil in an exploration acreage in the Campos basin, off the Brazilian coast. The discovery is more than 90 feet of high-quality oil in their Wahoo-2 well block, also identified as BM-C-30, The well is five miles to the north from the original Wahoo discovery well. In October 2008, the consortium had made its first discovery in the block during drilling of Wahoo well.

The original cost of acquisition of the ten offshore blocks was 280 million dollars.

ONGC Videsh Limited ( OVL) of India has invested almost a billion dollars in the acquisition of offshore blocks in Brazil

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Renuka Sugars of India acquires Brazilian firm for US$ 240 million in November 2009

Shree Renuka Sugars Ltd (SRSL), one of the largest Indian producers , has acquired Brazil’s Vale Do Ivaí SA Açúcar e Álcool (VDI) at an enterprise value of $240 million.

SRSL will pay $82 million now and the balance over eight years. It plans to finance the acquisition by leveraging the $105 million it raised through a qualified institutional placement (QIP) of shares in July.
The company operates eight sugar mills, five owned and three leased, with a cumulative daily crushing capacity of 35,000 tonnes.
The acquisition of VDI includes two sugar and ethanol production facilities in the southern Brazilian state of Parana, with a combined cane crushing capacity of 3.1 million tonnes a year. VDI holds strategic stakes in several logistics assets, including terminals for storage and loading of sugar and ethanol at the port of Paranagua.
The acquisition also includes 18,000 hectares of cultivable land under VDI, through which the company meets the larger part of its sugarcane requirements. The land is on long-term lease and used to cultivate cane with an average yield of 95 tonnes a hectare, with recovery of 13 per cent. In India, the yield (around 60-65 tonnes per hectare) and the recovery (a maximum of 11.5 per cent) are lower.

More Indian companies are planning to enter the Brazilian sugar sector