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Main Investment costs

Main Investment costs

Minimum wage

Minimum wages in the municipalities are guided by the readjustment policy present in the Brazilian constitution. For the year 2021, the minimum wage is R$ 1,100.00 reais (USD$ 292.25).

Average monthly wage of formal workers (2020) 3.9 minimum wages
Personnel employed (2020) 266,104 hab
Population employed (2020) 43.1%
Percentage of population with a monthly nominal income per capita of up to 1/2 of the minimum wage (2010) 30.7%

Source: IBGE

 

Electric Power

Electricity tariffs are divided into monomial – for low voltage – and binomial, which include conventional and hourly tariffs, including Green and Blue. The monomial tariff is the electricity supply tariff composed of prices applicable only to active electricity consumption. The binomial tariff, on the other hand, is the tariff structure composed of prices applicable to active electricity consumption and billable demand.

Conventional Tariff Mode – Low Tension TUSD + TE
Tariff Class Consumption
(R$/KWH)
B1 Residential without benefit 0.63628
Residential BR – Consumption up to 30 KWH 0.20028
Residential BR – Consumption from 31 to 100 KWH 0.34334
Residential BR – Consumption from 101 to 220 KWH 0.51502
Residential BR – Consumption over 220 KWH 0.57224
B2 Rural 0.52175
Rural Irrigation 0.17217
 Rural Electrif. Cooperative 0.52175
Irrigation Service 0.48357
B3 Commercial Services and Others 0.63628
Industrial 0.63628
Public Powers 0.63628
Public Service 0.57901

B4

Public Lighting
B4A – Distribution Grid 0.34995
B4B – Light Bulb 0.38177

Source: Energisa S.A, 2021.

White Tariff Mode – Low Tension
Group Class TUSD + TE (R$/KWH) TUSD (R$/KWH)

TE

(R$/KWH)

RUSH INTERM. OUTSIDE RUSH RUSH INTERM. OUTSIDE RUSH RUSH INTERM. OUTSIDE RUSH
B1 Residential 1.31238 0.83310 0.52306 0.89170 0.58166 0.27162 0.42068 0.25144 0.25144
B2 Rural Electrif. Cooperative 1.03448 0.65814 0.42058 0.68952 0.45196 0.21440 0.34496 0.20618 0.20618
Rural 1.03448 0.65814 0.42058 0.68952 0.45196 0.21440 0.34496 0.20618 0.20618
Rural Irrigation 1.03448 0.65814 0.13879 0.68952 0.45196 0.07075 0.34496 0.20618 0.06803
Public Irrigation Service 0.95879 0.60999 0.38981 0.63907 0.41889 0.19871 0.31972 0.19110 0.19110
B3 Commercial Services and Others 1.29968 0.82548 0.52052 0.87900 0.57404 0.26908 0.42068 0.25144 0.25144
Industrial 1.29968 0.82548 0.52052 0.87900 0.57404 0.26908 0.42068 0.25144 0.25144
Public Powers 1.29968 0.82548 0.52052 0.87900 0.57404 0.26908 0.42068 0.25144 0.25144
Public Service 1.18270 0.75118 0.47367 0.79989 0.52237 0.24486 0.38281 0.22881 0.22881

Source: Energisa S.A, 2021.

The state tax that is levied on the tariff is the Tax on the Circulation of Goods and Services (ICMS). Provided for in article 155 of the 1988 Federal Constitution, this tax is levied on operations relating to the circulation of goods and services and is the competence of each state and the Federal District, so the rates are variable. The distributor has the obligation to charge the ICMS tax directly on the energy bill, passing the value to the state government. It has different rates, 27% for  industrial and commercial sector, and 12% for rural sector, as shown in the table below:

ICMS Tax Rates on Electric Power Consumption
Class Tier (KWH) Rate
Commercial All 27%
Personal Consumption All 27%
Public Lighting All 27%
Industrial All 27%
State Public Power All Isento
Federal Public Power All 27%
Municipal Public Power All 27%
Residential Up to 100 Isento
From 101 to 150 12%
From 151 to 250 17%
From 251 to 500 25%
Over 500 27%
Rural Up to 50 Isento
From 51 to 500 12%
From 501 to 1000 12%
Over 1000 20%
Supply All Isento

Figure 08 Source: Energisa S.A, 2021.

 

The Contribution to fund the Public Lighting Service (CIP) is foreseen in article 149-A of the 1988 Federal Constitution, which establishes, among the competencies of the municipalities, to dispose, according to a specific law approved by the City Council, the form of collection and the basis for calculating the CIP. Thus, it is attributed to the municipal government any and all responsibility for the project, implementation, expansion, operation and maintenance of public lighting facilities. In this case, the concessionaire only collects the fee of public lighting for the municipality. The transfer is made even when the consumer stops paying the energy bill. Based on an annual tariff from the National Agency for Electrical Energy (ANEEL), the municipalities calculate the amount that each taxpayer will pay, considering the individual consumption.

Table for calculating the CCIP:

Consumption of up to 100KWH per month                       1.00% of the TCIP

Consumption of 101 to 200KWH per month                     4.00% of the TCIP

Consumption of 201 to 300KWH per month                     6.00% of the TCIP

Consumption of 301 to 500KWH per month                     8.00% of the TCIP

Consumption of over 500KWH per month                        10.00% of the TCIP

Property without energy consumption meter per year   60.00% of the TCIP

Energisa Mato Grosso – Distribuidora de Energia S.A., has channels exclusively to deal with requests for analysis of particular projects. The request for project analysis must be made exclusively through the Virtual Agency, under “Requests – Electrical Project Request”. The maximum period for an answer regarding the analysis of the electrical project is 30 days. For clarification of doubts regarding the analysis process of private projects, contact the responsible sector of each Unit of the Energisa Group, according to the contacts below:

 

Energisa Mato Grosso:

projetoparticular.emt@energisa.com.br

Telefone (65) 3926-5646

Source: Assistant Secretary of Management and Metropolitan Planning, Government of Mato Grosso

 

Natural Gas

The natural gas distribution is present in the CNG (Compressed Natural Gas) segment in the city of Cuiabá since May 05, 2005, after the homologation of the ceiling tariff of this segment, on 30/11/2005, of R$ 0.89 per cubic meter, added to this value the commercialization costs and incident taxes, resulting in a final consumer value of R$ 1.35 per cubic meter that year

In current values the cost U$4.80 MBTU (Bolivia) resulting in the value to the final consumer, in consultation made on April 29, 2021 of R$ 2.80 or US$ 0.50.

Source: Assisant Secretary of Management and Metropolitan Planning, Government of Mato Grosso

 

Water Supply

TARIFF CHART – 2021

 

Effective: from April/2021

 

Readjusted by 2.218% in comparison with the previous chart

 

TARIFFS – Value (R$) per Cubic Meter (m3)

Consumption Tier
(Water volume in m3)

Up to 10 m3

11 to 20 m3

21 to 30 m3

31 to 50 m3

Over 50 m3

Social Residential

1.770

4.330

7.240

8.860

11.730

Residential

3.540

4.330

7.240

8.860

11.730

Commercial

5.510

8.320

8.320

8.320

8.320

Industrial

6.460

9.590

9.590

9.590

9.590

Public Power

6.920

11.340

11.340

11.340

11.340

Sewage Tariff: 90% the Water Tariff

Source: Águas Cuiabá, 2021.

 

CUIABÁ INDUSTRY WATER TARIFF PER M³

VALUE

CURRENCY

CONVERSION

R$         6.32

USD

$                  0.88

R$         9.38

USD

$                  1.68

       

 

CUIABÁ COMMERCIAL WATER TARIFF PER M³

VALUE

CURRENCY

CONVERSION

R$     5.38

USD

$                  0.96

R$     8.13

USD

$                  1.46

Source:
1. Assistant Secretary of Management and Metropolitan Planning, Government of Mato Grosso.
2. Águas Cuiabá, Igua