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Lobby group says that oil shipments to the US from Brazil will resume following tariff exemption

The head of the Brazilian oil lobby IBP said on Wednesday that energy companies in Brazil will resume oil exports to the United States following the exemption from U.S. duties for several oil products.

The top Brazilian export to the U.S. is oil. It was exempted from the 10% tariff on Brazilian exports in April, but the uncertainty about whether it would be exempted under the new tariffs announced on the 9th of July led to a stoppage in shipments throughout the month.

Despite the fact that President Donald Trump's Wednesday decree increased tariffs on Brazil by 50%, several Brazilian exports were excluded from this measure, including orange juice, aircraft, pulp, and energy products.

Roberto Ardenghy said, "We're out of the tariff."

IBP represents oil and gas companies in Brazil, including Petrobras Shell TotalEnergies ExxonMobil Equinor.

Ardenghy stated that due to uncertainty about tariffs in the past, companies stored oil on production vessels floating or cargo ships instead of shipping it to the United States.

Oil shipments stopped when it became impossible for them to reach their destinations before August 1.

According to data collected by StoneX, the consultancy group, Brazil will export 1.78 million barrels of oil per day in 2024. Of this, 243,000 barrels of oil per day will be exported to the United States.

Ardenghy stated that if no oil exemption had been granted, Brazil would likely have diverted shipments towards Europe and India.

Magda Chambriard is the CEO of Petrobras - Brazil's state oil company. She said that there would be no major impact on the company and it could divert flows to other areas.

Ardenghy said, "Putting tariffs on our product is a lose-lose situation." (Reporting and writing by Marta Nogueira, Editing by Leslie Adler & Rosalba o'Brien; Fabio Teixeira)

(source: Reuters)