Our consultant Luiz Felipe Monteiro Seixas was featured in an article on the BNamericas website regarding the announcement of R$130 billion in investment to improve electricity distribution in Brazil by 2030.
The funding was secured through the renewal of concession contracts, as provided for in Decree No. 12.068/2024, which also established 17 guidelines for the modernisation of public services in the country. Until then, the sector had been governed by contracts signed in the late 1990s, which the government considered to be insufficiently stringent in terms of quality criteria for electricity supply.
Among the main changes introduced are the inclusion of customer satisfaction as a performance indicator for distributors, the requirement for continuous improvement in the quality of supply, and the setting of targets for restoring service following extreme weather events.
Although contracts for 16 distributors operating in 13 states have already been renewed, there are pending renewals for Enel: one in Rio de Janeiro, one in Ceará and another in São Paulo, which is the subject of an ongoing expiry process at ANEEL.
According to Luiz Felipe, there is no way to say for certain that the Ministry of Mines and Energy (MME) is waiting for the São Paulo case to be resolved before making a decision on Rio and Ceará. “What may be happening is that the government is exercising greater caution regarding the Enel group as a whole due to the repercussions of the São Paulo case, but this is merely one possible interpretation and further confirmation is needed,” he analysed.