From Ethanol to FPSOs: The Brazil Partnership Sri Lanka Cannot IgnoreTrincomalee Can Become the Offshore Repair Hub of the Indian Ocean
Posted on May 27th, 2026
Dr Sarath Obeysekera
Brazil’s offshore oil industry is dominated by the state-controlled energy giant Petrobras, which operates one of the world’s largest deepwater offshore production networks. Most production comes from the pre-salt” offshore basins located far offshore in the Atlantic Ocean, particularly the Santos and Campos Basins.
From AI resources –
What is an FPSO?
An FPSO means:
Floating Production Storage and Offloading vessel
These are essentially giant floating offshore factories and storage terminals combined into one vessel.
They:
- Receive crude oil from subsea wells
- Process oil and gas onboard
- Store crude oil in hull tanks
- Offload oil to shuttle tankers
They are preferred in deepwater offshore fields because building fixed platforms in ultra-deep waters becomes extremely expensive.
Brazil is considered one of the global leaders in FPSO technology and operations.
Major FPSOs Operating in Brazil
Búzios Field FPSOs
The giant Búzios field offshore Brazil now has several FPSOs operating.
Recent units include:
- FPSO P-74
- FPSO P-75
- FPSO P-76
- FPSO P-77
- FPSO Almirante Barroso
- FPSO Almirante Tamandaré
- FPSO P-78
The newest unit, P-78, started production recently with capacity around:
- 180,000 barrels/day oil
- 7.2 million cubic meters/day gas
Mero Field FPSOs
Another major offshore development is the Mero field.
Key FPSOs include:
- Guanabara MV31
- Sepetiba MV32
- Marechal Duque de Caxias
- Alexandre de Gusmão (MO26)
The MO26 FPSO is considered among the world’s largest FPSOs.
Upcoming FPSOs
Brazil continues expanding aggressively.
Future FPSOs planned include:
- P-81
- P-87
- Atapu-2
- Sépia-2
These are linked to massive offshore developments expected through 2030.
Offshore Rigs Operating in Brazil
Brazil uses many types of offshore drilling rigs:
- Drillships
- Semi-submersible rigs
- Jack-up rigs (limited use in shallow water)
Major international offshore drilling contractors active in Brazil include:
- Transocean
- Valaris
- Seadrill
- Noble Corporation
- Diamond Offshore Drilling
These rigs operate in ultra-deep waters often exceeding:
- 2,000–3,000 meters water depth
Why This Matters to Sri Lanka
This is exactly why Sri Lanka should engage Brazil strategically.
These FPSOs and rigs periodically require:
- Steel renewal
- Hull repairs
- Retrofitting
- Mechanical overhauls
- Accommodation upgrades
- Pipe fabrication
- Offshore logistics support
Many repair yards in Singapore are heavily occupied and expensive.
A properly developed Trincomalee Harbour could eventually become:
- A lay-up anchorage
- Offshore repair center
- Fabrication hub
- Crew logistics base
- Marine engineering training center
Sri Lanka already has:
- Experienced welders
- Ship repair capability
- Lower labour costs
- Strategic location near Middle East and Asian offshore routes
The missing factor is strategic industrial vision.
Regards
Dr Sarath Obeysekera