Bloomberg
If there’s one industry where all of Brazil’s political and economic upheavals come together, it’s shipbuilding.
A Rio de Janeiro shipyard, where suspended president Dilma Rousseff once promised to employ an army of welders, electricians and engineers to make offshore oil platforms, is all but shut. Every other day, 50 workers on average hand in their helmets and are sent home jobless, according to the yard’s union. More than 5,000 were on site in late 2014, and by the end of this month they are all expected to be gone.
The Inhauma shipyard is the latest to succumb to a crisis that has wiped out nearly half of the country’s naval industry jobs in the past two years, leaving companies bankrupt and creditors unpaid. It also represents the failure of Brazil’s plans to build almost from scratch a high-end industry that would compete with Asian yards and supply the most ambitious offshore oil expansion on Earth.
State-controlled Petroleo Brasileiro SA, which had agreed to pay more to have platforms built at home to help jump-start the naval industry, is now sending work back to Asia, underscoring the vulnerabilities of an industry that basically relies on a single client. Petrobras pumps about 90 percent of Brazil’s oil, and the yards expanded to meet its ambitious growth targets. Those plans fell apart after the Rio de Janeiro-based producer buried itself under the biggest debt load in the industry and became the focus of a sprawling corruption scandal.
“It’s a combination of the economic crisis, the political crisis, lower oil prices, the corruption scandal, just everything together,†union leader Jesus Cardoso, who has been helping Inhauma workers with their dismissal rights, said in a phone interview.
Four vessels were supposed to have hulls converted at Inhauma for $1.7 billion, and then collectively pump 600,000 barrels a day, or about 30 percent of Brazil’s current oil production. Two of them were done entirely by COSCO Shipyard Group in China, and a third was only sent to Brazil for final touches. Just one of them, the hull for the P-74 platform, was converted in Brazil, and two years behind schedule.