Brazil should give up electricity for Lent, a Rio de Janeiro-based analyst told Interfax on Wednesday, with a touch of gallows humour. However, it is no laughing matter: the hydropower-dependent country has just recorded the second-driest January in 80 years, and the prospect of electricity rationing looms. The 100 days between Carnival and kick-off for the 2014 World Cup now threaten to be the toughest period of Dilma Rousseff’s presidency. Rousseff, who has staked her political credibility on the lights staying on, is likely to write blank cheques for LNG to bail out the power sector. Analysts blame both the structural weakness of Brazil’s power sector – which affords the country little flexibility during supply tightness – and poor policy decisions for the situation. As reservoir levels run low, costly LNG imports appear to be the country’s last resort for the second consecutive […]