Navy admiral named Brazil's Minister of Mines and Energy

By Cecilia Jamasmie / November 30, 2018 / www.mining.com / Article Link

Brazil's President-elect and former army captain, Jair Bolsonaro, has named a Navy admiral as his Mining and Energy Minister. This appointment marks the eighth member of the armed forces to Bolsonaro's government and the 20th Minister appointed so far.

Bento Costa Lima Leite de Albuquerque Junior (60), the current head of Brazilian Navy's nuclear and technology development program, was born in Rio de Janeiro, and has been with the institution since 1973.

The new Minister will be tackling offshore oil licensing rounds and planned energy privatizations in his new job, according to a Twitter post from Bolsonaro's son, Carlos Bolsonaro.

The government-led transition team is already taking part in talks to free up billions of barrels of offshore oil reserves for development by foreign oil companies.

Navy admiral named Brazil's mining and energy ministerNavy admiral named Brazil's mining and energy minister

Some oil industry executives criticized Albuquerque's lack of experience in the sector, the current Mining and Energy Minister, Moreira Franco, welcomed the appointment and described the upcoming minister in a tweet as "very well prepared for the technical and command responsibilities of the sector."

While Bolsonaro hasn't yet provided specifics of his view for the mining sector, there are expectations for deregulation of the industry, but some of his past statements have activists up in arms.

While Bolsonaro hasn't yet provided specifics of his view for the mining sector, there are expectations for deregulation of the industry.

He has said he may withdraw from the Paris climate accord if it means sacrificing sovereignty over the Amazon, an ecosystem with worldwide ecological significance. Asked about the indigenous reserves in the area, he has declared he won't add even a centimetre to them.

Climate scientists say Bolsonaro's intention to open the Amazon for greater development could make it impossible for Latin America's largest nation to meet its reduced emissions targets in the coming years.

Other examples conservationists are worried about include Bolsonaro's criticism of the country's environmental agencies for blocking or taking too long to approve mining and energy projects. He has promised to reduce the wait time to license small hydroelectric plants to a maximum three months, rather than the decade it can sometimes take.

The Mines and Energy Ministry was one of the last to be defined. It is not yet known who will lead the Ministry of the Environment.

Together with being the world's top iron ore producers, Brazil hold large reserves of bauxite, manganese and potash. It's also Latin America's No. 1 oil producer.

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