Welcome to the ABCC NEWS webpage. Find here information about the ABCC, relevant articles to the promotion of bilateral trade and culture and highlights on business opportunities.

Friday, 16 October 2009

ABCC – Forthcoming Events


Queensland - Brazil Business Club Luncheon


Proudly supported by Trade Queensland and sponsored by:
With special guests and speakers:
The Hon. Peter Beattie - Queensland's Trade Comissioner for the Americas
His Excellency Fernando de Mello Barreto - Brazilian Ambassador to Australia
Decio Amaral - Global Managing Director - Coal - Vale
Iain Mars - CEO - JBS Swift Australia

Focusing on: Mining, Renewable Energy & Agribusiness

Date: 22 October 2009
Time: from 12 pm to 2:30 pm
Venue: Customs House - Brisbane


To register contact ABCC secretariat: abcc@australiabrazil.com.au or tel (02) 9909 0987 or click HERE to register.



ABCC Western Australia-Brazil Networking Drinks

Do not miss the opportunity to network with our members and experts in Brazil at a casual gathering in Perth!

Date: Thursday, 29th October 2009
Time: 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Venue: Bar/Restaurant Travelodge Perth
Address: 417 Hay St, Perth
Dress Code: Casual
(finger foods provided, buy your own drinks)


To register, click HERE and download rgistration form.

For further information, contact Jose Santiago, ABCC WA on: 0429 109 631


Brazil Film Festival

4 days, 4 films and lots of partying!!
Date: 26th to 29th October 2009
Venue: Dendy Opera Quays
Movies: Brazil Lounge, The Sign of the City, Pindorama and Camila JAM
Thursday 29th October: After Party ay Cruise Bar
For more information and to purchase tickets go to: www.brazilianfilmfestival.com.au


ABCC New Members


The ABCC welcomes the following new members:

- Daniel Fujimoto and Marcelo Maya, B&A United
- Luiz Campiglia, CEO - National Australia Bank Brazil
- Michelle Lee, Royal Brisbane International College
- Sebastian Laffont, Deugro Projects Australia Pty Ltd

ABCC Membership Renewal 2010


ABCC Membership Renewal 2010

Dear ABCC members,

Just a reminder that the ABCC membership for 2009 expired on 30th June. To renew your membership, please download the membership form for 2010 below (note that the membership fee remains the same). As the viability of the Chamber depends largely on the payment of these subscriptions, we are counting on your membership renewal and continuous support to our projects and events throughout the year.

The membership renewal form can be faxed to our secretariat at: (02) 9908 5826 or via email to: info@australiabrazil.com.au.

We would like to thank all our members for their participation at our activities in 2008/2009 and express our commitment in continuing to deliver our services providing an exciting calendar of events for 2010.

Our planned forthcoming events include:

- Queensland Brazil Business Club Luncheon - Agribusiness/Mining/Renewable Energy - Brisbane;
- Technology and Innovation Seminar – Adelaide;
- Networking Drinks - Perth.

We look forward to your participation at our events.

From the ABCC Committee

To renew your membership for 2010 please click on the following link: http://www.australiabrazil.com.au/xtras/ABCC%20Membership%20Form%202010.pdf

Foreign Affairs


Interview with the Hon Stephen Smith MP by Joana Cunha, Folha de Sao Paulo, Brazil

The Hon Stephen Smith MP
AUSTRALIAN MINISTER FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS
SUBJECT: Australia-Brazil relations.

MS CUNHA: Hi, Mr Smith. How are you?
MR SMITH: I’m well.Yourself?

MS CUNHA: Well hi, I’m fine. Well is this your first time in Brazil?
MR SMITH: It is. It’s my first visit to Brazil. It’s my first visit as Foreign Minister and it’s the first Foreign Ministerial visit to Brazil since 2006 - and it’s essentially the reciprocal visit to Foreign Minister Amorim’s visit to Australia last year.

MS CUNHA: Sorry?
MR SMITH: It’s the return visit. Foreign Minister Amorim came to Australia last year so we agreed then that I would come to Brazil this year so it’s the reciprocal or the return visit from Foreign Minister Amorim’s visit to Australia last year.

MS CUNHA: Ok, and what’s the purpose of the visit?
MR SMITH: Well the purpose of the visit is that Australia very much wants to enhance its relationship and its engagement with Brazil. We’ve had a longstanding and friendly relationship with Brazil, we’ve had diplomatic representation and diplomatic recognition for over 60 years but when the current Australian government came to office 18 months ago, we very quickly came to the conclusion that the people-to-people and the trade and investment contacts between Australia and Brazil had gotten ahead of, had gotten in advance of the Government-to-Government relationship and we needed to address that because we think there is a lot more potential in the relationship between Australia and Brazil. So the exchange of visits between the two Foreign Ministers is the start of what Australia would want to see as more high-level ministerial contact and enhancing the relationship between Australia and Brazil.

MS CUNHA: Ok. Well I’m interested in the crisis. Just in terms of the commercial relationship between Brazil and Australia, can it be increased now?
MR SMITH: We share that view and we’ve actually seen some quite significant growth in our bilateral trade in the last couple of years. In 2008 there was over a 50 per cent growth in our bilateral trade over the previous year 2007 and Brazil is Australia’s largest trading partner in South America but we think there’s a lot of potential to increase and enhance that trade and investment in minerals resources, in agriculture and agribusiness and also in science and technology, so part of the purpose of my visit is to look at those areas where we think enhanced investment and trade relations can occur but we think there’s a lot of complimentarity between our economies, particularly in those areas that I’ve mentioned, minerals resources, agriculture and agribusiness.

MS CUNHA: Can you repeat the numbers?
MR SMITH: In 2008 we had a more than 50 per cent increase in the bilateral trade between Australia and Brazil over 2007’s and Brazil is Australia’s largest trading partner in South America.

MS CUNHA: Ok. What about discussions about the climate? The last event to discuss the climate happened last year in Poland in the middle of the crisis, and the next one is going to happen this year in Denmark after the crisis, or at least after the worst part of the crisis, what do you expect?
MR SMITH: Well both in terms of the GFC and also in climate change, I think they’re two very good examples of Australia and Brazil working closely. Australia very much appreciates Brazil’s expanding role as a global player and one of the first things the Australian Government did when it came to office at the end of 2007, was to ratify the Kyoto Protocol and we’ve been working very hard. Since then the Bali conference and now in the build up to Copenhagen, and so we’ve been working closely with Brazil on climate change matters but also in the aftermath of the GFC, the G20 has emerged as a key international institution and PM Rudd and President Lula have been working very closely in the G20 and in the run-up to the Pittsburgh meeting, we think that in addition to continuing to address some of the GF issues, whether it’s IMF reform, that also the G20 meeting in Pittsburg can be part of the momentum building up to Copenhagen. It’s very important in Australia’s view that we get a good outcome out of Copenhagen in so far as climate change is concerned. But both in climate change and in the G20, Australia’s attitude is that Brazil’s actions on both fronts reflect the fact that Brazil’s an emerging, not just a regional power, but emerging as a global player and part of enhancing Australia’s bilateral relations with Brazil is not just the growth in trade and investment or the growth in people to people contacts or the large number of Brazilian students we have in Australia, which is now about 16,000, but it’s also working closely with Brazil on these major regional and international and global issues and we’ve been working very closely on the G20 and that’s been part of the very close contact between PM Rudd and President Lula.

MS CUNHA: Ok. And do you have anything to add?
MR SMITH: Well just as a general proposition, one of the things that the Australian Government wants to do is to enhance our engagement with South America generally. Australia’s a continent and a country of just over 20 million people and we’ve become a developed and a prosperous country by being a great trading nation and we think there’s lots of potential for our enhanced engagement, not just with Brazil, but with South America generally and one of the foreign policy priorities the Australian Government has set is to enhance our engagement with South America and we see an enhanced engagement with Brazil as being important to that. But we think historically, in some respects, South America has looked to the north, either to the United States or to Europe, now South America is looking east and west and Australia comes into its horizon. Australia, which has traditionally looked to Asia and the Pacific, is now also looking much further afield and we see enormous potential with our engagement in South America generally so we’re working very hard to enhance that engagement, we see that as being very important to Australia’s economic, but also to our general strategic future.

MS CUNHA: Ok, well I think it’s good. Thank you very much for your attention Mr Smith.
MR SMITH: Ok. Thanks Joana. Thanks very much.

26 August 2009

Source: http://www.foreignminister.gov.au/transcripts/2009/090826_cunha.html.

Economy


Economies in Latin America are starting to rebound

Posted on Monday, September 28, 2009

By Tyler Bridges McClatchy Newspapers

LIMA, Peru — The construction industry here in Lima is booming, middle-class residents are once again snapping up new apartments in Rio de Janeiro and software companies in Santiago, Chile, are expanding.

A year after the global financial crisis exploded, most Latin American countries are putting the tough times in the rearview mirror during the final three months of 2009. Brazil, the region's giant and the world's ninth largest economy, is leading the way, along with such other market-friendly countries as Peru, Chile, Colombia, Uruguay and Panama.

But a rising tide is not lifting all boats. The slow economic recovery in the United States is holding back Mexico and most Central American nations, with drug violence and swine flu also battering Mexico.

Venezuela, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Bolivia and Argentina are lagging — in part because their leftist populist leaders have scared away investors and unsettled consumers with policies that have included nationalizing companies or private assets.

Despite the fledgling signs of recovery, the World Bank reports the net losers include the eight million Latin Americans who have been forced into poverty and the other five million who would have left poverty but for the difficult economic times. Overall, about 560 million people live in Latin America and 180 million of them were below the poverty line at the beginning of 2009, the World Bank says.

Strategies on how businesses and countries should tackle emerging challenges while maintaining political stability in the wake of the global financial crisis will be prime topics of discussion at this week's 13th annual Americas Conference at the Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables. The Miami Herald — along with Florida International University, the World Bank and the state of Florida — is sponsoring the event this Tuesday and Wednesday.

Meanwhile, it's worth remembering that the global economic crash ended Latin America's five best years since the 1950s.
Before the crisis hit, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, a Santiago-based United Nations Agency, expected Latin America to grow by 4 percent in 2009. Now it projects a 2 percent contraction.

Indicating its faith in a turnaround, however, the group is now forecasting a 3.1 percent growth rate in 2010 for Latin America.

As economists survey the past year and look ahead, they can't help but marvel at how Latin American countries, after years of being lectured to get their fiscal houses in order, mostly managed to swerve around the global economic pileup precisely because they followed that advice.

With exceptions in a couple countries, "there were no bank runs, no inflation spikes, no capital flight, no large devaluation, no big migration," said Marcelo Giugale, an economist who specializes in Latin America at the World Bank. "You didn't see the traditional symptoms of crisis" that sank the region's economies previously.

Jay Bryson, a global economist for Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte, N.C., pinpointed a major reason: "Latin American countries didn't get all leveraged up like the United States and Europe. You don't have households massively in debt."
Bryson and other economists said that most Latin American countries saved money, found new export markets and kept inflation low during the good years. This left them better prepared for the downturn.

Eduardo Lora, an economist at the Inter-American Development Bank, provided some numbers that highlight the improved climate for Latin America.

Foreign reserves more than doubled from $160 billion in 2003 to $430 billion at the end of 2008, Lora said. Total public debt as a percentage of gross domestic product for the region's seven biggest economies fell from 52 percent in 2003 to 27 percent in 2008, he added.

Brazil is the shining example for getting it right, although the picture certainly didn't look rosy a year ago. Brazil, after all, had lurched from economic crisis to economic crisis over the previous 25 years. Hyperinflation racked the country in the 1980s and early 1990s. Economic woes in other developing countries slammed Brazil later in the 1990s.

So it was almost expected that sales of cars, new apartments and home appliances plummeted last October, as did exports. Interest rates surged, and credit dried up for some industries. Soybean plantings fell, the stock market tanked and the value of Brazil's currency, the real, sank 25 percent compared to the dollar.

But Brazil's economy has come roaring back this year.

Paulo Levy, an economist at the Rio-based Institute of Applied Economic Research, said consumer-driven growth in the second half of 2009 will mean a slight gain in the economy this year. He's very bullish for 2010, expecting a 5 percent growth rate.

"Brazil is recovering from the crisis quicker than originally expected, and growth will be higher than expected," Levy said.
He credited nimble moves by the government of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, which has cut taxes on sales of new cars and home appliances, made it cheaper for middle-income families to buy homes, increased the minimum wage and raised payments to the poor under the country's heralded Bolsa Familia program.

"In our best-case scenario at the beginning of 2009, we were hoping that sales would equal those of 2008," said Marcelo Vasconcelos, sales manager for Patrimovel, a Rio-based real estate firm. But he said that 2009 sales will surpass the 2008 mark.

Vasconcelos is working seven days a week to keep up with buyers. "The possibilities for 2010 are unlimited," he said.
No sector better reflects Brazil's turnaround than the car industry. After the bottom dropped out a year ago, new car sales rose by 2.7 percent through this August compared to the first eight months of 2008.

"Credit came back, interest rates went down to their lowest historical levels and the government reduced the federal [sales] tax," said Rogelio Golfarb, the Sao Paulo-based director of corporate affairs and communication for Ford Motor Co. "We expect that the industry should grow by 5 percent in 2010" — the same amount Brazil's overall economy is expected to grow.

In Peru, which never slid into recession, new apartment buildings are going up throughout Lima, businesses are continuing to turn desert into productive farmland along the coast and mining companies are spending freely again.

Fernando de la Flor, owner of a real estate investment company, said it's local companies, rather than foreign firms, that are leading the charge. "It's locals who are investing," he said. "Peruvians are bringing their money back home. They want to hedge their international investments."

At Agrokasa, a major vegetable exporter, president Jose Chlimper said that exports of the company's asparagus, table grapes and avocados fetched 5 percent to 10 percent lower prices this year, but costs for freight and farming chemicals plummeted by 30 percent to 50 percent. Profits went up as a result.

Not only that, but the global crisis prompted Agrokasa to re-examine its operations and squeeze out the fat. "We're a more agile company now," Chlimper said. "I'm investing and planting more acres."

BOOST FROM CHINA

As with companies in Chile, Bolivia and elsewhere, Peru's huge mining industry is also rebounding, thanks in no small measure to demand from China. "Every mining company group put investments on hold" a year ago, said Hans Flury, president of the Peruvian Mining Association. "Everyone was scared by the foreign financial crisis."

Commodity prices plummeted across the board. Copper, for example, dropped to $1.43 per pound. It has now bounced back up to around $3 per pound. Mining companies in Peru are now planning $30 billion in investments over the next five years, Flury said.

"Everyone is thinking of moving forward and doing more exploration," he said. That's hardly the case in Argentina, where the economy is slowing down as a politically weakened President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner continues to mull over her plans for the economy following a major loss in June's mid-term elections.

"No one can plan for the long-term," said Jorge Fantin, a business professor at San Andres University in Buenos Aires. "A lot of decisions and investments are being delayed because of political uncertainty."

The situation appears even worse in Venezuela, and only partly because of the sharp drop in oil prices.

Venezuela suffers from the highest inflation rate in Latin America (30 percent), businesses have stopped investing, President Hugo Chávez is intervening more and more in the economy and the country's currency is worth more than twice as much on the black market as it is at the official rate, said Orlando Ochoa, a Caracas-based economist.

He expects the economy to contract by 2 percent in 2009 and show no growth in 2010. "Higher oil prices will be a relief, but this won't solve the problems of inflation, the budget deficit and recession," Ochoa said. "You'll see Latin America growing in 2010, and Venezuela stuck with the same problems."

Deborah Riner is somewhat more optimistic about a recovery in Mexico, which is suffering through the worst year of any Latin America country. Riner, chief economist for the American Chamber of Commerce of Mexico, expects the country's economy to shrink by 7.4 percent in 2009 and show a weak 2.6 percent growth rate in 2010.

"Things aren't as bad as they used to be," was the best that Riner could say from Mexico City. One growth industry in Mexico: Private security firms to protect beleaguered companies and individuals.

Rafael Amiel, the Philadelphia-based regional managing director for Latin America for IHS Global Insight, said he doesn't expect Mexico's economy to return to its pre-crisis size until the end of 2011.

A warning sign for Latin America's economic future: The World Bank's recent "Doing Business" report showed that Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe are moving quicker to clear away obstacles for investors.
"It's pathetic," said Jerry Haar, a Florida International University professor who specializes in international business. "The region is not competing."

Haar does take heart from the development of emerging software companies in places such as Campinas, Brazil; Córdoba, Argentina; Guatemala City; and Santiago.

Studio C, founded by two Guatemalans, has done computer animation work for such Hollywood movies as Fast and Furious and The Chronicles of Narnia.

"We are growing, opening different studios throughout Latin America, giving the opportunity to eager talent to be involved in the major features production industry," said Ramiro Arguello, one of the company's co-founders.

Polaris Software Lab, a company based in India that provides software applications to financial companies, is expanding its labor force in Santiago from 25 workers to more than 100 by next June. "Santiago offers qualified professionals at competitive [salaries]," said Cristian Basauri, the company's senior vice president for Latin America.

Source: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/world/story/76139.html



Brazil's Lula pleads for new world economic order

Thursday September 24, 2009, 2:40 am

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) - Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Wednesday made a strong plea for a new world economic order in the wake of the global financial crisis.
"Because the global economy is interdependent, we are obliged to intervene across national borders and must therefore re-found the world economic order," he said in a speech to the UN General Assembly.

Lula, who is to attend a summit of 20 leading developed and emerging economies hosted by US President Barack Obama in Pittsburgh later this week, reiterated his call for regulation of financial markets and an end to protectionism.

And he insisted anew that multilateral institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank must become "more representative and democratic" to deal with complex problems such as overhauling the international monetary system.

"Poor and developing countries must increase their share of control in the IMF and the World Bank," he said.

Turning to Brazil's domestic situation, he said his country had now emerged from a brief recession.

"Our economy has regained its impetus and shows promise for 2010. Foreign trade is recovering vitality, the labor market is doing amazingly well and macro-economic equilibrium has been preserved," he added.

Much of the turnaround in Latin America's biggest economy has been thanks to buoyant domestic consumption, spurred by government tax breaks and incentives to boost car sales in the hard-hit auto industry, state credit for exporters and central bank interest rate cuts.
Lula also vowed that his country would do its share to roll back global warming and would present "precise alternatives and commitments" at the crucial Copenhagen conference in December which aims to seal a new climate deal to succeed the landmark Kyoto Protocol which expires in 2012.

And the Brazilian leader, whose country has been lobbying to become a permanent member of the UN Security Council, said that "the United Nations and its Security Council can no longer be run under the same structures imposed after the Second World War."

Source: http://au.biz.yahoo.com/090923/33/28s6f.html.

Financial Markets


Santander raises $9.01bn in record Brazil IPO

By Elzio Barreto and Phil Wahba of Reuters
10:41 AM, 7 Oct 2009

SAO PAULO/NEW YORK - Banco Santander's Brazilian unit raised 14.1 billion reais ($A9.01 billion) in a record initial public offering in Brazil and the largest IPO on a US exchange in 18 months.

The bank, formally known as Banco Santander (Brasil) SA, sold 600 million units at a price of 23.5 reais each, according to a filing with Brazil's securities regulator.
Santander priced the IPO in the middle of its expected range of 22 reais to 25 reais.
Santander priced its US traded shares at $US13.50 each, according to an underwriter of the offering.

The IPO capped months of torrid activity in Brazil's stock market, which had 21.76 billion reais in share sales since late June.

The offering may also benefit from growing appetite for emerging market securities that has helped push the benchmark Bovespa index 68 per cent higher so far in 2009.
Banco Santander (Brasil) SA, a unit of Spain's Santander, will list the units in the form of American depositary shares (ADSs) on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "BSBR" and in Sao Paulo under the symbol "SANB11."

The IPO was the largest ever for a Brazilian company, beating the offering by credit card processor VisaNet in and the biggest in the world since Visa Inc's offering in March 2008.
Santander is the third largest private-sector bank in Brazil by assets, with a 10.2 per cent market share, behind Itau Unibanco and Bradesco.

The bank has expanded with six takeovers in Brazil the past 12 years, including the acquisition of Sao Paulo state bank Banespa in 2000 for 7 billion reais.

Santander purchased ABN Amro's Banco Real unit in Brazil in 2008 as part of its €70 billion ($A115.7 billion) bid for the Dutch firm with Royal Bank of Scotland and Belgian-Dutch Fortis.
The Brazilian unit has emerged as one of the most profitable parts of Santander, accounting for 20 per cent of its net income in the first half of 2009.

Banco Santander expects net IPO proceeds of $US6.8 billion ($A7.6 billion), and will use about 70 per cent of the funds to expand its network of branches and install automatic teller machines.
It will also use some of the proceeds to improve its capital ratios, according to its US regulatory filing.

Banco Santander had 3,603 full-service branches and smaller service centres in Brazil as of December 2008.

In the six months ended in June 2009, Santander's Brazilian unit reported net interest income of $US5.5 billion and profits of $US1.25 billion.

Source: http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/UPDATE-1-Santander-raises-805-bln-in-record-Brazil-WKV5B?opendocument&src=rss

Mining

Fortescue misses funding deadline

1 October 2009 by Paul Hayes

Fortescue Metals failed to meet yesterday’s deadline for a US$6 billion funding deal with Chinese banks.

“Fortescue Metals Group advises, with regard to its agreement announced on 17 August 2009 with the Baosteel Group and China Iron & Steel Association (CISA), that the condition subsequent relating to the completion of finance by 30 September, 2009 will not be met in time,” the company announced in a statement to the Australian Securities Exchange.

The funding was part of a deal Fortescue reached with Baosteel and CISA to supply the Chinese steel industry with 18 million tonnes of iron ore by 31 December.

Fortescue’s deal represented a 3% discount to the benchmark price Rio Tinto set with non-Chinese steel makers in May.

The iron ore pricing agreement may now be under a cloud as it was subject to Fortescue completing the financing deals with Chinese banks.

“Fortescue intends to continue working co-operatively with CISA including the provision of attractive iron ore pricing if requested,” the company said.

The Fortescue pricing deal was at the time seen as a victory for Chinese iron ore price negotiators, who have steadfastly refused to accept a proposed 33% price cut that Rio Tinto had offered Japanese and Korean customers.

CISA has been holding out for a price cut of around 40%.

Reports from China earlier this week have said that CISA is now in iron ore negotiations with both BHP Billiton and Brazil’s Vale, after talks with Rio Tinto were suspended.

Source: http://www.miningaustralia.com.au/Article/Fortescue-misses-funding-deadline/500569.aspx.

Agribusiness

Brazil Overtakes US and China in Farming Productivity

Written by Claudia M. Abreu
Wednesday, 30 September 2009

When the topic is the agribusiness productive chain Brazil is heading the productivity ranking. From 1960 to 2005, agricultural productivity in the country grew on average 2% a year. Brazilians left behind countries like China (1.8%), India (1.5%), Argentina (1.5%), Canada (0.8%) and the United States (0.8%).

The figures are included in study "Sustainable Brazil - Perspectives for Brazil in Agroindustry", elaborated in partnership between consultancy company Ernst & Young Brazil and FGV (Fundação Getúlio Vargas) Projetos. The work took into consideration the economic results of 100 countries, which represent 97% of the global Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

According to Fernando Garcia, technical coordinator of the project, the arrival of the country to the top of productivity is the result of hard work by the private initiative and also a government policy for the sector.

There are four pillars for sustaining growth: mechanization, capital for investment, formation of great industrial complexes and technological leadership. "Due to the global crisis, for example, the BNDES (Brazilian Development Bank) has acted fast: it made available credit for the purchase of machinery, reduced the Industrialized Product Tax (IPI) levied on the purchase of tractors and also financed imports. The Brazilian policies did not focus only on credit for the financing of production," he said.

Another important point is the agricultural price policy of the country. "Here we have a liberal policy, which is important to stimulate investment and, consequently, sector productivity," he said. According to Garcia, Argentina adopted a system of livestock price control, which had a catastrophic result. The sector lost stimulus and Argentine beef lost market share.
In the private initiative, some sectors deserve special mention, as is the case with the pulp, sugar and alcohol and beef cattle farming sectors. "These are sectors that have capital, that can finance technological advances, for example," said Garcia.

Pulp companies, for example, are among those that innovated most from 2003 to 2005 - 52% having promoted organizational changes and 14% investing in innovation of products and processes. When the topic is investment in research and development, pulp companies also take the lead. The study shows that, in 2005, they spent 5.1% of revenues in research and development.

But to guarantee growth in coming years, Brazil still needs to advance in technology. "We have the Embrapa, which does excellent work, but we need more technicians there," said Garcia. According to him, there are sectors that cannot "finance themselves" in the same way as the pulp sector, for example.

"These sectors need an adequate technical policy," he said. In comparison with other countries, for example, the expenses of the Brazilian transformation industry (which covers food, beverages, paper, pulp, etc) with research and development, in comparison to revenues, is way below that of Europe and the United States .

In Brazil, it is just 0.6%, against 3.6% by American companies and 5.1% of Europeans. "This is one of the bottlenecks, which is added to the question of infrastructure," said Garcia.
According to Garcia, it is important for the country to solve these questions, as it will be pressed to produce more - and in a sustainable manner in coming years. "The country is one of the only ones with good land available, different from the United States and Canada, and even from Argentina," he remarks.

Food from Brazil is important to supply the giant China which, according to the study, should be the second main market for Brazilian agribusiness in 2030- the country is currently the seventh in the ranking. It will only lose to the United States.

Chinese imports (at 2007 prices) should be US$ 2.15 billion. It will be a guarantee of growth of Brazilian sector exports, which rose at an average of 10.2% a year from 1995 to 2005.

Another point that justifies the greater demand for food is the "new global growth". This time it is developing nations that are growing. "There is social mobility and the first sector to grow is food," said Garcia. Many people are going to have access to more sophisticated food products.
In developing nations, when there was growth, the pressure was on goods, like real estate, household appliances and cars, etc. Perspectives for 2030 are for growth of family income of 2.5% in Brazil and 6.2% in China, for example, against 1.1% in Japan.

The study about agribusiness is the fifth of a series developed by Ernst & Young and FGV Projetos. The paper analyzes the horizons of the Brazilian economy for the next two decades, considering strategic sectors for the development of the country.

Up to now, the series has covered the following topics: the potential of the housing market, economic growth and potential consumption, industrial competitiveness and energy.

Brazil in Anuga

Brazil should have a big presence at an important German food fair. Dozens of Brazilian companies will participate in the Anuga fair, one of the largest in the food and beverage sector in the world, to take place in Cologne, Germany, from October 10th to 14th. The Brazilian stand, organized by the Brazilian Export and Investment Promotion Agency (Apex-Brasil), should include 120 companies.

Brazilian companies are going to occupy a record area at the fair, 2,200 square meters. In 2007, Anuga received 163,000 visitors from 174 countries. Products like fruit, nuts, dairy, wine, sweets, chocolate, meats, special coffees and organics should be among the items presented at the fair.

Amidst 6,000 exhibitors from 95 countries, it is worth recalling that Brazil is the main global exporter of coffee, beef and poultry, orange juice and sugar, as well as being the second main exporter of soy and having the largest cattle herd in the world.

According to the Apex-Brasil, Brazilian participation in Anuga is aimed at expanding business opportunities mainly for value-added industrialized products. Several medium and small companies were selected to exhibit in the Brazilian pavilion.

With a diversified portfolio of agricultural products, Brazil exported 1,500 agribusiness sector products last year to over 200 markets in Europe, the Americas, Asia, Africa and the Middle East.

Source: http://www.brazzilmag.com/content/view/11263/1/.

Special Coverage: Rio Olympics 2016

Olympics 2016: Rio is the winner


Announcement sparks jubilation in host city after surprise elimination of Chicago despite Obama's plea


Adam Gabbatt and agencies


Friday 2 October 2009 18.34 BST



Scenes of jubilation in Rio de Janeiro after it was named the host city of the 2016 Olympics.
Photograph: Silvia Izquierdo/ASSOCIATED PRESS


Rio de Janeiro has won the battle to host the 2016 Olympics and take the games to South America for the first time after the shock elimination of Chicago in the first round of voting today.


There were celebrations on the streets of Rio this evening after the announcement by the IOC president, Jacques Rogge.


Before opening the envelope containing the name of the winning city, Rogge said: "All four projects are of the highest quality – thank you for your hard work, energy and commitment. But in every competition there can only be one winner."


Earlier the Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, made an impassioned appeal to delegates, saying Rio's bid represented the hopes of the whole of South America. "I honestly think it is Brazil's turn," he said. "It is South America's bid. This is a continent that has never held the games. It is time to address this imbalance. It is time to light the Olympic cauldron in a tropical country."


The city's bid chief said awarding the honour to Brazil was an opportunity to make Olympic history.


"When you push the button today, you have the chance to inspire a new continent, make Olympic history," said Carlos Nuzman, the Rio bid chief executive and IOC member. "Vote Rio and we offer a gateway to 180 million passionate young people in South America."


Madrid's surprising success in reaching the final round came after the former IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch made an unusual appeal for the Spanish capital, reminding the IOC members as he asked for their vote that at age 89 "I am very near the end of my time."


In the end Rio's excellent campaign masterminded by Mike Lee, the communications director for London's bid, proved enough.


In Chicago, thousands of people who had crowded into the city's Daley Plaza anticipating a celebration let out a collective gasp at the news of their bid's failure. Even those who were ultimately sceptical about the bid were shocked to learn the city did not even make the first cut.
"I've never really had a disappointment like this," said Ken Rudd, a 33-year-old salesman, as the dumbfounded crowd slowly filed out of the plaza. "This is one of the saddest things I've ever seen."


Chicago had been the bookies' favourites to succeed London, especially after Barack Obama flew to Copenhagen to address the IOC this morning. His home town's early exit was seen as a snub for Obama, the first serving US president to appear before the IOC. He told delegates he hoped that the games would show "America at its best is open to the world". Michelle Obama arrived two days earlier alongside other dignitaries including Lula and King Juan Carlos of Spain.


With the games going to South America for the first time, Africa is the only continent where none of its countries has been awarded an Olympics.


Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2009/oct/02/rio-wins-2016-olympic-games.

Olympic Games


Rio 2016 - Olympic Games - Master Plan

Click on the link below to see the video on the Youtube.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TCoqZNesnM

Fair & Exhibitions


CORTE E CONFORMAÇÃO DE METAIS 2009

5th Fair and Congress on Cutting and Shaping of Metals
October 5 to 7, 2009


Biannual/International/Sectoral Fair

Product lines and/or services:
new technologies, hydro-shaping, stamping of metal slabs, CAD/CAM on slabs, metal rolling and stretching, machine loading and unloading systems, laser cutting, water-jet cutting, tube processing, etc. With roughly 300 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 12 noon to 8pm.

Sponsor: Aranda Eventos e Congressos Ltda.
Venue: Pavilhões Verde e Branco – Expo Center Norte – Sao Paulo- Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.arandanet.com.br
E-mail of the event:
eventos@arandanet.com.br


AGROENERGY

I International Fair of Technologies for Production and Distribution of Clean Renewable Energy
October 6 to 8, 2009


Sectoral / International / Annual Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Pumps, boilers, connections and compressors. With roughly 80 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 2 pm to 8 pm.

Sponsor: Cipa Ltda
Venue: Centro de Exposições Imigrantes -Sao Paulo- Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.cipanet.com.br
E-mail of the event:
cipa@cipanet.com.br


FEIGÁS

I Industrial Gas Fair
October 6 to 8, 2009


Biannual / International / Sectoral Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Heaters, pumps, boilers, cylinders, compressors, condensers, connections, consulting, flanges, LPG, hoses, etc. With roughly 70 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 2 pm to 9 pm.


Sponsor: Cipa Ltda
Venue: Centro de Exposições Imigrantes -Sao Paulo- Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.cipanet.com.br
E-mail of the event:
cipa@cipanet.com.br


METALTECH

III Industrial Metals Technology Fair
October 6 to 8, 2009


Biannual / International / Sectoral Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Accessories and components for installations, technical consulting, electrodes, tools, matrixes, abrasives, etc. With roughly 80 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 2 pm to 9 pm.

Sponsor: Cipa Ltda
Venue: Centro de Exposições Imigrantes -Sao Paulo- Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.cipanet.com.br
E-mail of the event:
cipa@cipanet.com.br


FUTURECOM 2009

11th Telecommunications Products and Services Exhibition
October 13 to 16, 2009


Sectoral / International / Annual Exhibition

Product lines and/or services:
Telecommunications and IT innovations and solutions, companies, IP, internet, suppliers of services, networks and cables, distributors, satellites, consulting, security of information, data centers, applications, software houses, integrators, etc. With roughly 230 exhibitors, the fair will be open to business people from 9:30 am to 6:30 pm.

Sponsor: Provisuale Partiçipações Ltda
Venue: Transamerica Expo Center -Sao Paulo- Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.futurecom.com.br
E-mail of the event:
negocios@provisuale.com.br


ART MUNDI Edição Brasília

7th World Handcrafts Fair
October 16 to 25, 2009


Sectoral / International / Annual Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Handcrafted products, decoration, clothing, household goods, carpets, fashion accessories, and complements, typical cuisine, toys, footwear, beverages, etc. With roughly 200 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 1 pm to 10 pm on week days, and from 10 am to 10 pm on Saturdays and Sundays.

Sponsor: Diretriz Empreendimentos S/A
Venue: Expo Brasília – Parque da Cidade- Brasília- Distrito Federal
Website of the event:
www.artmundidf.com.br
E-mail of the event:
diretriz@diretriz.com.br


ART MUNDI Edição Brasília

6th World Handcrafts Fair
October 24 to November 2, 2009

Sectoral / International / Annual Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Handcrafted products, decoration, clothing, household goods, carpets, fashion accessories, and complements, typical cuisine, toys, footwear, beverages, etc. With roughly 390 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 1 pm to 10 pm on week days, and from 10 am to 10 pm on Saturdays and Sundays.

Sponsor: Diretriz Empreendimentos S/A
Venue: Expo Center Norte – Sao Paulo- Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.artmundisp.com.br
E-mail of the event:
diretriz@diretriz.com.br


FENATRAN

17th International Transport Salon
October 26 to 30, 2009


Sectoral / International / Biennial Salon

Product lines and/or services:
Transporters of all modalities of cargo, manufactures of cargo vehicles, implements, auto parts, motors and tires, distributors of oil and byproducts, manufacturers of equipment for workshops and terminals. With roughly 360 exhibitors, the fair will be open to business people from 1 pm to 9 pm.

Sponsor: Reed Exhibitons Alcântara Machado S/A
Venue: Pavilhão de Exposições do Parque Anhembi– Sao Paulo- Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.fenatran.com.br
E-mail of the event:
info@fenatrancom.br


FIMMEPE-MECÂNICA NORDESTE


15th Fairs of the Metallurgical, Mechanical and Electrical Materials Industries of Pernambuco
October 26 to 30, 2009


Sectoral / International / Annual Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Machines, components, tools, plastics, etc. With roughly 250 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 5 pm to 10 pm.

Sponsor: Sindicato das Industrias Metalúrgicas, Mecânicas e de Material Elétrico do Estado de Pernambuco - SIMMEPE
Venue: Centro de Convenções de Pernambuco – Olinda- Pernambuco
Website of the event:
www.mecanicanordeste.org.br
E-mail of the event:
simmepe@simmepe.org.br


FISPAL BAHIA


1st International Fair of Food Products, Packaging, Equipment, Accessories and Services
October 27 to 30, 2009


Sectoral / International / Annual Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Industrial processes, packaging, food and beverages, equipment, food service accessories, raw materials and ingredients. With roughly 350 exhibitors, the fair will be open to the public from 4 pm to 10 pm.

Sponsor: BTS Feiras, Eventos e Editora Ltda
Venue: Centro de Convenções da Bahia – Salvador- Bahia
Website of the event:
www.fispalbahia.com.br
E-mail of the event:
falecom@fispalbahia.com.br


BIOFACH AMÉRICA LATINA


7th International Organic Fair of Latin America
October 28 to 30, 2009


Sectoral / International / Annual Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Beverages, organic foods and natural cosmetics. With roughly 300 exhibitors, the fair will be open to business people from 11 am to 8 pm.

Sponsor: Programação Visual 2A2
Venue: Transamerica Expo Center – Sao Paulo – Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.biofach-americalatina.com.br
E-mail of the event:
biofach@planetaorganico.com.br


EXPOSUSTENTAT


5th International Fair of Organic Products of Latin America
October 28 to 30, 2009


Sectoral / International / Annual Fair

Product lines and/or services:
Socio-environmental products and services, foods, cosmetics, handcrafs, technologies and services for sustainability. With roughly 130 exhibitors, the fair will be open to business people from 11 am to 8 pm.

Sponsor: Programação Visual 2A2
Venue: Transamerica Expo Center – Sao Paulo – Sao Paulo
Website of the event:
www.exposustentat.com.br
E-mail of the event:
sustentat@planetaorganico.com.br

Exclusive for Members


ABCC cuts deal with Qantas on flights to South America: Enjoy the all-year-discount and personalized service with Qantas from April 2009

Qantas Travel and The Australia-Brazil Chamber of Commerce have an all-year-round reason to travel from anywhere in Australia with Qantas to:

- Buenos Air;
- Santiago;
- Montevideo;
- Sao Paulo and other Brazilian cities;

With an exclusive Qantas discount only available to ABCC members!!

For the Best Fare of The Day or for more information on the exclusive All-Year-Round ABCC fare offer contact:
Qantas Travel, Bridge Street on (02) 9951 4294