FOCUS-Brazil's Petrobras confronts new foe: fuel thieves

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By Gram Slattery and Marta Nogueira

RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 20 (Reuters) - Brazilian state-run oil firm Petrobras has in the last five years battled an epic corruption probe, a crippling recession and unsteady crude prices.

Now, Brazil's most important company is facing yet another challenge: thieves are robbing millions of dollars worth of its fuel to sell on a thriving black market.

Theft from Petrobras pipelines soared to a record high 261 incidents in the states of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo last year, up from just one case in 2014, according to an August securities filing and statements made to Reuters by representatives of Petroleo Brasileiro SA, as the company is formally known.

Most of those heists, police say, are the work of sophisticated criminal groups, some with their own trucks, distribution firms and even retail gas stations.

"They're creative creatures," said Julio da Silva Filho, the head of a Rio police unit that investigates oil theft.

Crime costs Petrobras' distribution subsidiary, Petrobras Transporte SA, or Transpetro, over 150 million reais ($37 million) per year, Petrobras Chief Executive Roberto Castello Branco said at an event in June.

The alleged losses are tiny compared to those of another Latin American energy powerhouse - Mexico - where crime gangs have infiltrated the petroleum business in a big way. Fuel theft costs state-run Pemex over $3 billion annually, according to company figures.

But stamping out Brazil's problems early, da Silva said, will be crucial to keeping gangsters from becoming entrenched in its oil industry.

"We're working exactly to prevent Brazil from turning into Mexico," he said.

Transpetro has set up a program to gather intelligence on criminal groups and is spending 100 million reais ($24 million) a year to fund it, according a high-ranking company source, who requested anonymity to avoid retaliation from organized crime groups.

Around 50 staffers are now studying the issue, including tracking the patterns and methods of oil thieves and sharing those findings with law enforcement, the person said. The company, which did not respond to a request for comment, has also set up a hotline for the public to report fuel robbery.

Some foreign investors, too, are beefing up security. They include TAG, a pipeline unit that France's Engie SA bought from Petrobras for $8.6 billion in April.

The firm told Reuters in a statement that it is working with Transpetro, whose pipelines often run beside TAG's pipes, to increase foot patrols and reinforce physical barriers, among other measures.