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Chevron, Transocean face 2nd $11 billion Brazil lawsuit

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RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters)—A Brazilian federal prosecutor on Tuesday launched his second 20 billion real ($10.94 billion) lawsuit against U.S. oil company Chevron Corp. and driller Transocean Ltd., doubling the stakes against the companies as critics call him as overzealous.

The new lawsuit, the prosecutor's second civil case against the companies in less than five months, is related to an oil leak discovered on March 4 in Chevron's offshore Frade field northeast of Rio de Janeiro, the Federal Public Prosecutor's office said in an email.

The new lawsuit, filed in federal court in Campos, north of Rio de Janeiro, also seeks to prevent Chevron and Transocean from operating in Brazil, transferring Brazilian profits overseas, obtaining government-backed finance and moving equipment from the country, the statement said.

"The second leak is as serious or more serious than the first, so the damages have to be in the same category," Brazil's federal prosecutor Eduardo Santos de Oliveira, told Reuters. "While they are not a simple mathematical calculation, they are not symbolic either."

Chevron and Transocean's activities may have damaged the Frade reservoir, making it impossible to produce from the field, denying Brazil its right to royalties on a public resource, Mr. Santos de Oliveira, said.

In November, he launched his initial 20 billion real lawsuit over an estimated 3,000-barrel spill in the Frade field. Mr. Santos de Oliveira considers the spill as one of the worst-ever ecological disasters in Brazil.

Chevron's November spill was less than 0.1% of B.P.'s 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Chevron said the March leak, which led to the latest lawsuit, was about two barrels, of which less than one escaped, making it less than 0.1% of Chevron's November spill. Unlike in the Gulf of Mexico, no Chevron oil came near the coast.

"The filing of the second lawsuit is another in a series of outrageous actions brought by the same district attorney who previously filed both a criminal and civil case, all of which are without merit," Chevron said in a statement.

"The 20-billion-real figure in both civil lawsuits is arbitrary and has no legal and factual basis," Chevron said.

The size of the damages have also caught the attention of politicians close to the government of President Dilma Rousseff. Jorge Viana, a senator from Rousseff's Workers' Party and one of the country's leading environmentalists, told Reuters on March 22 that the damages being sought are "irresponsible" and if applied to all companies working in the country could lead to the shutdown of Brazil's oil industry.

The industry generates revenue worth more than 10% of gross domestic product in Brazil, the world's sixth-largest economy. Chevron is the No. 2 U.S. oil company by market value.

Chevron now faces about $22 billion in potential legal charges from cases launched by Mr. Santos de Oliveira alone. That's more than the $20 billion B.P. set aside to pay damages and for its cleanup of its far larger spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

It's about triple the $7.8 billion B.P. it agreed to pay a month ago to more than 100,000 people who said they were hurt by U.S. spill. It's more than half of the $37.2 billion charge B.P. took against earnings on the spill.

"Look at what's being set aside by B.P. in the United States and you'll see everything you need to know about what the prosecutor is asking," said Ildo Sauer, a professor at the University of Sao Paulo's Electro-technical and Energy Institute and former head of natural gas and energy at Brazil's state-led oil company Petrobras.

"I can't figure out where he got these numbers from or how he came up with such a figure," said Mr. Sauer, who has a Ph.D in nuclear engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

In the B.P. spill 11 died and about 4.9 billion barrels leaked over three months. In Frade, no one was hurt and the leak was stopped in four days, according to Chevron.

The amounts being asked of Chevron and Transocean don't include unspecified damages being sought by Brazil's largest oil workers' union for the same spill or several hundred million dollars of fines already levied against the companies by Brazilian regulators.

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Mr. Santos de Oliveira has also filed criminal charges against Chevron, Transocean and 17 of their employees. The charges could carry jail terms of up to 31 years.

"Everything suggests that we are operating in an environment where there is a huge gap in our legal, institutional and technological ability to deal with and run an offshore oil industry," Mr. Sauer said in an interview.

The prosecutor's office also said Tuesday that Mr. Santos de Oliveira plans to investigate Brazilian national oil regulator ANP and environmental protection agency Ibama over their handling of the November spill and March leak.

On March 30, Mr. Santos de Oliveira told Reuters he plans to expand his probe to investigate other oil companies in the Campos Basin, the location of the Frade field and the source of about 80% of Brazil's more than 2.6 million barrels a day of oil and natural gas output.

"This part is aimed right now at trying to prevent accidents from happening in the future," Mr. Santos de Oliveira said. "While it is now a civil investigation, if we find evidence of criminal wrongdoing we will file criminal charges."

The biggest operator in the Campos Basin is Petrobras, which operates 39 of the 47 producing fields in the region, according to Brazil's oil regulator, the ANP.

Other operators in the area include Anglo-Dutch Shell, Brazil's OGX Petroleo, Spain's Repsol, Denmark's Maersk Oil and the U.K's B.P.

Chevron and its partners in Frade, Petrobras and Frade Japao, a Japanese group led by Inpex and Sojitz, asked for and received permission to end operations temporarily in that field after the March leak.

The field, which was producing about 80,000 barrels a day at its peak last year, was producing about 62,000 barrels a day when it was shut down.

Chevron owns 52% of Frade, Petrobras owns 30% and Frade Japao 18%. Petrobras former chief executive Jose Sergio Gabrielli said last year that Chevron's partners may have to pay their share of any damages won against Chevron for actions in Frade.

Chevron said on March 21 that tests showed the March leak was not from any reservoir it was producing from in the field. An ANP official told a Brazilian Senate committee earlier this month that the November spill caused no discernable environmental damage.

Both Chevron and Transocean have said they have done nothing wrong, that they are innocent of any crimes and will defend their employees against civil and criminal charges.

"Transocean acted responsibly appropriately and quickly putting safety first. We'll continue to strongly defend our company, our people and the quality of our services," Transocean, the world's largest drill rig operator, said in a statement.

Chevron shares fell 1.2% to $107.14 in New York. Transocean stock fell 3.9% to 48.83 Swiss francs.

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