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Brazil firm's strike cutting oil output by 80,000 bpd, lobby says

A partial strike by staff members at Brazil's environmental company, which authorizes oil licenses, is lowering the nation's oil output by some 80,000 barrels per day, the head of oil lobby group IBP Roberto Ardenghy stated on Monday.

On Friday, Ibama workers in 14 states voted to strike due to a conflict over earnings, profession structure and working conditions, making the strike authorities after months of dragging out environmental licensing treatments and other activities.

We began with a reduction in oil production of 5,000 to 10,000 barrels daily, and reached 80,000 barrels per day on Friday, Ardenghy informed journalists on the sidelines of an occasion in Rio de Janeiro, noting the disagreement in between federal government and Ibama staff members has actually now lasted more than 160 days.

In May, Petrobras had estimated a possible impact of 2% on its annual production due to the Ibama strike, which has actually impacted the licensing of its oil wells.

More than a

dozen companies

in the oil and gas sector have been impacted by hold-ups in environmental licensing, said national union Ascema in a press release on Friday.

(source: Reuters)