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Brazil Freight Transport Report Q1 2008

Product Type: Market Research Report
Published by: Business Monitor International
Published: November 2007
Product Code: R302-1515
Description
In mid-2007 Brazil’s air traffic control system was teetering on the brink of a systemic failure. On July 28
the main runway at Congonhas Airport in São Paulo, Brazil's busiest, reopened, 11 days after a TAM
passenger jet skidded off its rain-slicked surface and crashed, killing 199 people. It is now clear that
capacity at Congonhas, the country’s busiest airport, had been stretched beyond safety margins. The
runway's closing after the crash forced airlines to cancel hundreds of flights and caused a ripple effect of
delays around the country. The accident triggered a political crisis for President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
Even before the crash, public confidence in flying was at an all-time low, with widespread frustration at
delays and cancellations. Last September, a plane belonging to the carrier Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes
(Gol) collided over the Amazon jungle with a US-registered executive plane and crashed, killing all 154
people aboard. The two crashes were the worst in Brazil's history. The weekend after the crash, an
electrical failure closed down all air traffic control capacity over the Amazon, resulting in more
cancellations and forcing numerous international flights on their way to Brazil either to turn back to the
United States or land in Central American countries. The underlying problem is that scant investment has
been made in infrastructure, including at airports and in-air traffic technology. That said, in this Freight
Transport Report, BMI still projects annual average air freight growth rate of 9.1% over the 2007-2012
period.


Various factors support this prediction. Fundamentally, we believe Brazilian aviation is experiencing a
crisis of unrestrained and unplanned growth. We now expect a correction, but the fundamentals will still
point to expansion. Annual Brazilian GDP growth will average 4.5% in the 2007-2012 period (up from
3.2% in the preceding five-year period). While this will underpin general air-freight demand, aviation will
benefit from even faster demand growth for high-value/low-bulk cargoes.


The overall freight picture will be encouraging. There continue to be no reliable statistics on Brazilian
road-freight haulage. However, based on BMI estimates, we expect freight carried to be growing at an
average of around 6.6% per annum, because investment to improve and repair the highway network is
still lagging. The largely privatised rail-freight sector will do better, aided by Brazil’s commodity export
boom, particularly in mining. We now expect the growth figure in 2007-2012 to be an annual average of
10.2%. Total tonnage handled by Brazil’s main seaports will rise by an average of 8.5% per annum in the
forecast period, down on the 8.7% registered in the preceding five years. The main reason for this is that
after the foreign trade and export boom peaked in 2004 and another strong year in 2007, we see both
import and export growth moderating significantly in the next few years, when domestic consumption is
likely to be the main engine of macroeconomic growth.


Brazil performs reasonably well in our freight transport industry business environment matrix, scoring
significantly above the regional average. Freight growth, infrastructure growth, the regulatory and
competitive environment all score well. Economic and political risk is comparable to the Latin American
peer group. The transport intensity index is also above the regional average, although there is something
of a question mark over the future dynamism of the country’s foreign trade. Foreign trade still represents
only around 25% of GDP, although on the other hand the sheer geographical size of the country means
there will be healthy internal demand for freight transport.


According to our latest estimates, the total value of transport and communications GDP will rise to
US$108.7bn in nominal terms by 2012, representing 5.5% of Brazil’s GDP. The transport and
communications sector employed 4.26mn people, or 4.7% of the labour force, in 2006. We see these
figures rising to 5.47mn - and 5.2% - by 2011.

Table of Contents
Executive Summary
SWOT Analysis
Brazil Road Haulage Industry SWOT
Brazil Economic SWOT
Business Environment Overview
Table: Latin America Business Environment Ranking
Business Environment Ranking
Economics - Long-Term Risk
Politics - Long-Term Risk
Freight Transport Growth
Transport Infrastructure Growth
Regulatory Environment
Competitive Environment
Transport Intensity Index
Political Risk Summary
Economic Risk Summary
Business Environment Risk Summary
Legal Code/Corruption
Red Tape
Labour Force
Industry Trends And Developments
Road
Rail
Air
Sea
Pipelines
Industry Forecast Scenario
Macroeconomic Overview
Table: Brazil - Economic Activity
Transport Outlook
Table: Freight Carried, Domestic And International (mn tonne km)
Table: Transport Industry Forecast Scenario
Trade Environment
Overview
Trade Agreements
Tariffs
Table: Value Of Imports By Category (US$mn)
Table: Value Of Exports By Category (US$mn)
Table: Top Export Destinations (US$mn)
Table: Export Trade (% y-o-y)
Table: Top Import Sources (US$mn)
Table: Import Trade (% y-o-y)
Market Overview
Multi-Modal
Table: Key Players - Brazilian Freight Transport Sector
Competitive Landscape: Multimodal
Road
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Road
Rail
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Rail
Company Profiles
América Latina Logística (ALL)
MRS Logística
Air
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Aviation
Company Profiles
Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes
Infraero (Empresa Brasileira de Infra-Estrutura Aeroportuária)
Water
Infrastructure
Competitive Landscape: Maritime
Pipelines
Competitive Landscape: Pipelines
BMI Forecast Modelling
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Transport Industry
Sources


Ordering and More Information
Price and Delivery Options



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