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1 RESULTS ANNOUCEMENT 4th Quarter and Fiscal Year 2009 (Brazilian Corporate Law) Conference Call / Webcast José Sergio Gabrielli de Azevedo CEO March, 24th 2010

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1

RESULTS ANNOUCEMENT

4th Quarter and Fiscal Year 2009 (Brazilian Corporate Law)

Conference Call / Webcast

José Sergio Gabrielli de AzevedoCEO

March, 24th 2010

2

DISCLAIMER

The presentation may contain forecasts about

future events. Such forecasts merely reflect the

expectations of the Company's management.

Such terms as "anticipate", "believe", "expect",

"forecast", "intend", "plan", "project", "seek",

"should", along with similar or analogous

expressions, are used to identify such forecasts.

These predictions evidently involve risks and

uncertainties, whether foreseen or not by the

Company. Therefore, the future results of

operations may differ from current expectations,

and readers must not base their expectations

exclusively on the information presented herein.

The Company is not obliged to update the

presentation/such forecasts in light of new

information or future developments.

The United States Securities and Exchange

Commission permits oil and gas companies, in

their filings with the SEC, to disclose only proved

reserves that a company has demonstrated by

actual production or conclusive formation tests to

be economically and legally producible under

existing economic and operating conditions. We

use certain terms in this presentation, such as oil

and gas resources, that the SEC’s guidelines

strictly prohibit us from including in filings with the

SEC.

CAUTIONARY STATEMENT FOR

US INVESTORS

11.969 12.056

2.124 2.113

Oil & NGL Natural Gas

International ReservesBrazil Reserves

2008 2009

Billion boe

o 18 years of reserves to production in Brazil, 8 year reserves to production internationally

o Pre-salt discoveries from Espirito Santo Basin contributed with 182 million boe. Estimated reserves

in Santos Basin pre-salt are still under appraisal and therefore not included in proved reserves

o Decrease in international reserves as constitutional changes in Bolivia eliminate reserve recognition

2009 RESERVE REPLACEMENT:17th consecutive year of fully replacing brazilian production

14.093 14.169

0.497 0.493

0.495

0.203

Oil & NGL Natural Gas

0.992

0.696

2008 2009

RRI: 110%

3

ANP/SPE Criteria

224 238

2,2882,176

National International

321 317

1,9711,855

Oil & NGL Natural Gas

PRODUÇÃO SEGUE TRAJETÓRIA SUSTENTADA DE CRESCIMENTO

Oil & Gas Average Total

Production

2008 2009

Thous. boed

2008

2009 PRODUCTION:Significant production increases in Brazil and internationally

2,4002,526

2009

2,176 2,288

o 6% increase in national oil production from ramp-ups of P-52, P-54 and P-53 and start-up of 5 new

units;

o 6% increase in international production from Akpo and Agbami fields in Nigeria;

o Natural Gas production declined because of reduced demand in Brazil

Oil & Natural Gas Average

Domestic Production

4

PRODUÇÃO 2010

Pre salt

Natural Gas

Heavy oil

1ST QUARTER 2ND QUARTER 3RD QUARTER 4TH QUARTER

Cachalote eBaleia Franca

100 th. bpd3.2 million m3/d

EWT Tiro and Sidon20 th bpd

Uruguá Tambaú

10 million m3/d

35 th. bpd

Mexilhão

15 million m3/d

TUPI Pilot

100 th. bpd

5 million m3/d

EWT Guará30 th. bpd

EWT Tupi Northeast 30 th. bpd

7971

2,050

2,100

+- 2.5% 2,171

200

2009 Target Difference

2009 Target–

Production 2009

Target 2010

Ajusted

(BP 09-13)

Difference

Target 2010 –

Target 2009

(BP 09-13)

Projects

postponed

NEW 2010

TARGET

2010 PRODUCTION TARGET: Growth from new systems and enhanced recovery

5

DOWNSTREAM: Strong investments in fuel quality and expansion

9%

2%

34%

25%

30%

Fuel Quality

Complexity

New projects*

Logistics

Others

o 6.2% increase in diesel output and 5% reduction in fuel oil output yoy

o 6 million barrel reduction in diesel imports

○ Acid and ultra-acid oils processing up 178% yoy

○ Comply with more strict environmental standards

○ Start up of Diesel S-50 production in 3 refineries (REDUC, REPLAN and REGAP)

○ 3 new HDT units

Downstream Investments in 2009 R$ 17.3 billion

* Includes Northeast refinery, Comperj, Suape Petrochemical plant and Plangás

Construction in progress (US$ bn)

2008 2009

US$ 11.9 US$ 22.7

694 737

343 331

142 135

136 143

255 243

65 74153 159

2008 2009

Diesel Gasoline LPG Nafta Fuel Oil Jet fuel Others

Oil Products output (th. bpd)

1,787 1,823

6

7

753 769 782

364 327 366

211 222 212

434 492 489

4Q08 3Q09 4Q09

Diesel Gasoline LPG Others

Oil Products

o Diesel sales increased with the Brazilian economy recovery (although imports decreased 43%)

o Higher level of gasoline sales due to reduced competitiveness of ethanol

o Reduced levels of natural gas sales due primarily to lower thermoelectric demand

4Q08 3Q09 4Q09

Natural Gas

244 247

311

2009 CRUDE OIL AND PRODUCT SALES:Growth in domestic sales and higher export volumes

Thous.b

arr

els

/day

1,762 1,8101,849

2009

478397

227

152

Exports Imports Net Exports

2008

234197

439 373

Exports Imports Net Exports

571

673

102 156

549

705

IMPROVEMENT IN TRADE BALANCE NUMBERS

(Thous. Barrels/day)

Oil

Oil Products

o Domestic oil production increased 5% and oil

products imports decreased 23% with a volumetric

surplus of 156,000 barrels per day

o Reduction of 43% on Diesel imports due to Diesel

Maximization Program

o Improving YoY trade balance by US$ 3.8 billion

12,327

22,17315,201

21,246

2008 2009

Imports Exports

+ US$ 2,874- US$ 927

Financial Volume (US$ Million)

8

ENERGY AND BIOFUELS SALES

o Biofuels sales increased 34% due to minimum percentage of biodiesel in diesel (from 3% to 4%)

o Increase of 23% on Energy sales due to short term sales (balance) higher than 2008

o Auctions to sell short term natural gas surplus

74

98

19 27

2008 2009

Biodiesel Ethanol

Biofuels SalesThous. boe/day

93125

2008 2009

Energy Sales MWatts average

1,4011,721

9

10

NATURAL GAS AND ENERGY GENERATION INFRASTRUCTURE

CONSOLIDATION

o Natural Gas logistic and Energy generation

Infrastructure consolidation. Highlights:

o Urucu-Coari-Manaus pipeline and

Gasoduc III – 844 KM and 44.1

MMm3/d NG capacity

o LNG Regasification Terminals:

- Guanabara Bay and Pecém - 27

MMm3/d

o Floating LNG Project (FEED) for Pre-

salt Cluster (Santos Basin)

o Flexibility in the NG supply chain:

o Auctions and bi-lateral agreements

to sell short-term NG supply

(average sales of 4.7 MMm3/d de NG

in 9 auctions)

o Portfolio diversification concluding first

investment cycle

2009 COST REDUCTION EFFORTS : Optimization policies substantially reduced costs

Negotiating Bids

o Rebid of services and equipments for the Northeast Refinery R$ 7 billion CAPEX reduction

o Price renegotiation for 8 FPSO hulls for pre-salt and the FPSOs for Guará and Tupi Northeast Pilots

o Rebid of platforms P-61 e P-63 resulting in cost reduction of US$ 420 million

o Released bids to create domestic rig building industry

Op

tim

izin

g C

osts Bid

Project

Culture

Rationalizing Projects

o “Assembly line” of 8 identical pre-salt FPSOs

o P-56 clone of P-51

o Relocation of FPSO Capixaba from Golfinho Field to the

Whales Park field

Corporate Culture

o R$ 750 million reduction in Corporate Overhead

o 6 thousand suggestions from workforce to reduce costs

11

12

R$/bbl

ARP EUA: 194.71

ARP Petrobras: 176.41

2008 average

ARP EUA: 130.06

ARP Petrobras: 157.77

2009 average

o Growing crude oil exports benefit from higher crude oil prices, improving quarterly earnings during the year.

Lower discount between benchmark light and Petrobras oil also contributed

o Following long term pricing policy, Petrobras average realization price (ARP) declined less than international

prices, recovering shortfalls experienced in 2008

o Oil product pricing in Brazil continue to converge with international pricing

o Pricing policy contributed to positive refining margins in 2009 (stable revenues, declining costs)

2009 PRICE IMPACT:Volatile international oil prices, stable domestic product prices

0

50

100

150

200

250

Jun-07 Sep-07 Dec-07 Mar-08 Jun-08 Sep-08 Dec-08 Mar-09 Jun-09 Sep-09 Dec-09

86.13

32.23

48.68

7576.75

64.42

105.46

100.58

47.95

64.00

70.24

115

121

97

89

75

55

44

59

68

20.00

40.00

60.00

80.00

100.00

120.00

3Q07 4Q07 1Q08 2Q08 3Q08 4Q08 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09

US

$/b

bl

Petrobras Oil Price (US$/bbl) Brent (US$/bbl)

(R$ MILLION)

45,950 (32,408) 32,586 - 46,128

2008

Operating Income (1)

Net Operating

Revenue

COGS Operating

Expenses

2009

Operating Income (1)

13(1) Operating income before financial result, equity balance and taxes

o Decrease in operating income due to lower oil prices (2008: R$ 149.80; 2009: R$ 104.88) and

lower ARP of oil products (2008: R$ 176.41; 2009: R$ 157.77)

o COGS decrease due to lower lifting cost with government participation and oil and oil products

import price decrease

o Operating expenses were flat despite Marlin Special Participation (R$ 2.065 bi)

FULL YEAR 2009 OPERATING INCOME:Higher income with efficient cost controls

(R$ MILLION)

2009

Net Income

32,988 178 (5,967)28,982

5,985

790

(4,992)

o The deterioration in the financial results were due to: Real revaluation (2008: depreciated

32%; 2009: appreciated 26%) and increase in debt indexed to the exchange rate

o Increase in equity income reflects better results from petrochemical sector (R$ 682 million)

and international subsidiaries (R$ 127 million)

o Decrease in taxes due to lower income, results increase in units abroad which present

differentiated tax regimes and losses in some subsidiaries

o Negative results in Minority Interest reflect FX gains in debt of consolidated SPE’s

2008

Net Income

Taxes Minority Interest

and Employees

Part.

Financial

Result

Equity

Income

Operating

Income

14

FULL YEAR 2009 NET INCOME:Small decline, largely from exchange related variations

15

o Debt profile improved with new borrowings: longer tenor, competitive costs and diversified

sources

o Leverage sustained within the target range (25% to 35%)

R$ Billion 12/31/2009 9/30/2009 12/31/2008

Short Term Debt 15.3 10.6 13.9

Long Term Debt 85.1 79.6 50.9

Total Debt 100.3 90.2 64.7

Cash and Cash

Equivalents28.8 30.1 15.9

Net Debt 71.5 60.1 48.8

Net Debt/Ebitda 1.2X 1.1X 0.9X

US$ Billion 12/31/2009 9/30/2009 12/31/2008

Total Debt 57.6 50.7 27.7

28%28%26%

26%

31%

15%12%

19%

22%21%

12/31/2008 6/30/2009 12/31/2009

Net Debt/Net Capt. Short Term Debt/Total Debt

2009 CAPITAL STRUCTURE:Higher leverage due to growing capex

DEBT PROFILE IMPROVEMENT

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Up to 5 years > 08 years

2007 2008 2009

60%73%

27%

40%

Consolidated debt profile

Debt by maturity (%)

o Debt increased to financing long-term

investments

o Corportate debt mainly maturing in the

Long-Term

o Average life of debt reached 7.46 years in

2009 (in 2008 was 4,21).

2007 - R$ 39.74 billion

23%

77%

Short-Term debt

Long-Term debt

2009 - R$ 100.33 billion

15%

85%

16

Jan-Dec 2008 Jan-Dec 2009 4Q09

Cash at the beginning of the period

13,071 15,889 30,088

Net cash from operating activities 49,952 51,838 13,658

Investments (53,425) (70,280) (19,658)

Net cash flow (3,473) (18.442) (6,000)

Dividend paid (6,213) (15,440) (5,605)

Net cash from financing activities 11,837 47,067 10,080

Cash at the end of the period 15,889 28,796 28,796

R$ Million

Brent (US$/bbl) 97 62 75

FX Rate (R$/USD) 1,84 2,00 1,74

2009 CASH FLOWS:Investments supported by cash flow and incremental debt

o Net cash from operating activities grew 4% in 2009 despite decrease in commodities price in the

international market

o Increase in investments was supported by additions to debt

o Build-up in cash balances as of year end 2009 (despite advance payment of dividends), undrawn

term loans and stable pricing, will support capex during 2010

17

57 60

2008 2009

CAPEX SPENDING:Reflects continued ramp-up of long term plan

EBITDA (R$ billion)

Capex 2009

R$ 70.7 billion

17.4

6.8

31.610.5

0.6

3.8

18

34.0

6.2

36.7

8.1

0.9

2.6

E&P

RTC

G&E

International

Distribution

Others

Annual Investment Budget (OAI) 2010

R$ 88.6 billion 25%

BUSINESS PLAN 2010 - 2014

INVESTMENT 2010 – 2014 BETWEEN US$ 200 TO US$ 220 BILLIONS:

MONITORING FINANCIAL RATIOS

o Leverage between 25% and 35%

o Net Debt/ EBITDA up to 2.5X

o Investment revenue maintenance in the different segments

RELEVANT ASSUMPTIONS FOR THE PROJECTIONS

o Brent curve – upward trend

o Capitalization – value and timing

o Funding needs for the new Strategic Plan 2010-2014

19

INDUSTRY COST OUTLOOK:New growth trend compared to economy recovery

SOURCE: IHS CERA – MARCH 2010

CO

ST

IN

DE

X (

20

00

=1

00

)

E&P CAPITAL COST INDEX

E&P OPERATIONAL COST INDEX

DOWNSTREAM CAPITAL COST INDEX.3Q08

230

4Q08

221

4Q09

201

4Q10

2113Q08

187

1Q09

170

4Q09

172

4Q10

176

20

Minority shareholders participation in the capitalization (US$ Bn) 15 25

Investments (US$ bn) 200 220

Average Brent Price (US$ bbl) 64 77

Leverage 32% 27%

Net Debt/EBITDA 2.2 1.6

ASSUMPTIONS

Financiability Simulation (Average 2010 - 2014)

BRENT CURVES: Higher crude Long term oil price guarantee funding requirements

21

Projects approved up to R$ 265 billion which will be present in the

Company’s investment portfolio for the period 2011 – 2014 :

E&P – R$ 163.6 billions RTC - R$ 80.5 billions

G&E - R$ 20.2 billions PBIO - R$ 430 millions

Main Projects:

o Significant investments in the pre salt without divesting in the post salt which

includes self sufficiency maintenance in oil and investments in infrastructure for

the pre salt

o Investments in modernization and expansion of refining in Brazil

o Petrochemical and Fertilizer project developments

o Investment in ethanol pipelines and infrastructure

o Expansion of natural gas infrastructure and LNG investments

o New energy projects

BUSINESS PLAN 2010 - 2014

22

23

2009 and 2010 PRE-SALT: Accelerating activities in the santos cluster

Caramba

Bem-te-viCarioca

IguaçuAbaré

Azulão Guarani

Guará

North

ParatiIara

Iracema

Tupi

Tupi 660Tupi

South

Jupiter

Tupi NE

Tupi O/A

Tupi 646Guará

Wells drilled

Drilling for ANP

Drilling

EWT

Completing / testing

o EWT currently producing 20 thous. bpd

o 2 wells being drilled: Tupi O/A, North of Guará

o 1 well being drilled for ANP in the North of Iara

o 1 well being completed and evaluated in Guará

and Tupi NE test finished with high productivity

of 30 th. bpd

o During 2010, 11 new wells expect to be drilled in

the pre salt cluster

o Bids in progress:

(i) FPSO for Guará pilot

(ii) FPSO for the second pilot in the BM-S-11 (still

being defined)

(iii) 8 hulls for the Santos cluster

24

Valuation of

the barrels

Timing

CAPITALIZATION UPDATE: Bills approved in lower house, now before senate

Transparency and

fairness

Size of

capitalization

o Access to 5 billion barrels

o Greater Financial strength

o Participation of all shareholders in a larger company with more opportunities

Results ofcapitalization

o Only completed after areas defined

o One well drilling, another scheduled

o Appraisal by at least 2 independent

certification companies

o Future revaluation to ensure fairness

o STILL TO BE DETERMINED

o Variables value of the barrels +

funding needs + capital structure

o Board Committee to represent

minority and preferred shareholders

o All shareholders will have equal

subscription rights

o Full and Transparent disclosure of all

relevant information

o All Bills for capitalization and new

regulatory regime now passed by

Lower House

o Senate has up to 45 days to approve,

modify or reject the bill. If modified,

must reconcile with lower house

o Completion of Capitalization 60 to 90

days after bill becomes law

BILL 5941/09 COURSE OF ACTION (CAPITALIZATION):

Fast track procedure since arrival in the Senate

1 Bills sent to commission

2 Amendments are presented in the CCJ

Arrival in the Senate,

appreciation of the bill

and forward1

Presidential message

requesting fast track

procedure Art.64 F.C.

o Bill is sent to commissions and timeline is open for

amendments 2o After deadline for amendments the bill shall be voted and sent

to plenary

25 days

Subject

inclusionVoting

process

Up to 35 days

After 45 days, subject is ceased

Approval with

amendments

Approval

Rejected

Filled

Presidential

approval

Up to 15

business days

Art 66 FC

Returns to the

Lower House

Up to 10

days

Appreciation and

amendment

voting

03/22/10 05/06/10

05/17/10

06/04/10 05/27/10

Up to 15

business days

Art 66 FC

25

199181 181

154 150

324

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

Exxon Petrobras Shell BP Chevron Total

PETROBRAS MARKET VALUE RECOVERY

13.0%-20.3% 99.6% 24.2% 14.7%2.8%

Source: Bloomberg

o Improvement in outlook contributed for the raise of main oil and gas companies market value

o In 2009, Petrobras had the highest appreciation in Market Cap. among its Peers

US$ billion

406

100

160 146 150131

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

12/3

1/2

009

12/3

1/2

008

26

2009 CAPEX AND 2010 ESTIMATE

0

5.000

10.000

15.000

20.000

25.000

30.000

35.000

40.000

45.000

50.0002009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

2009

2010

US

$ M

M

2009

average

without

Petrobras

2010

average

without

Petrobras

Source: Evaluate Energy and Company Reports

2010 Petrobras CAPEX , of R$ 88.5 Bi, was converted using FX rate of 1,87 R$/US$ (2010 Petrobras premise). For 2009, preliminary results in

USGAAP – Not audited

*

27

28

Information:

Investor Relations

+55 11 3224-1510

[email protected]

(33,093)

5,689 3,050 (1,195) (1,711) 29,972

57,232

o Revenue decline from 30% decrease in petroleum price and 44% decrease in gas transfer price

o Higher sales volume due to 5% growth in domestic oil and gas production

o 17% decrease in lifting cost, primarily a reduction in Royalties and Special Participation

contributed to the decrease in COGS

o Increase in operational expenses due to non-recurring charge for adjustment to Special

Participation tax for Marlim field

Jan-Dec/08

Oper. Income

Jan-Dec/09

Oper. Income

(R$ MILLION)

Price Effect

on Revenues

Volume Effect

on Revenues

Cost Effect

on COGSOperational

Expenses

Volume Effect

on COGS

29

FULL YEAR 2009 SEGMENT RESULTS - E&P:Lower average oil price reduces operating income

(28,648)

53,4572,240 (2,203)

234 20,482

(4,598)

(R$ MILLION)

Price Effect

on Revenues

Volume Effect

on Revenues

Cost Effect

on COGS

Operational

Expenses

Volume Effect

on COGS

Jan-Dec/08

Oper. Income

Jan-Dec/09

Oper. Income

30

o Lower export prices and ARP in the domestic market contributed to revenue reduction

o Decrease in downstream COGS reflected: strong reduction in domestic oil and international oil

products acquisition cost as well as lower average inventory costs

o 6% increase in diesel production therefore an import reduction amounting 6 million barrels

o Margin in 2009 of 14%, versus -3% in 2009

FULL YEAR 2009 SEGMENT RESULTS – DOWNSTREAM:Stable prices and declining COGS lead to turnaround

(1,482)

3,388 (2,879)

2,497

546 1,541

(529)

(R$ MILLION)

o Revenue decrease due to lower gas sales volume (19% decrease), gas price reduction (7%

decrease) as well as reduced power dispatch

o Higher gross margins (from 11% to 28%) due to lower acquisition costs for gas and electrical

energy

o Ongoing completion of gas infrastructure has led to avoided penalties and higher electricity sales

Price Effect

on Revenues

Volume Effect

on Revenues

Cost Effect

on COGS

Operational

Expenses

Volume Effect

on COGSJan-Dec/08

Oper. Income

Jan-Dec/09

Oper. Income

31

FULL YEAR 2009 SEGMENT RESULTS - GAS AND POWER: Margins improve, offsetting reduction in demand

(4,887) 4,792

7,401 (6,786)

(318)2,035

1,833

(R$ MILLION)

o Decrease in sales price more than offset by increase in sales volume (+13%) and higher

market share following acquisiton of Alvo Distribuidora (2008: 34.9%; 2009: 38.6%)

o Increase in operational expenses due to higher SG&A from increased sales activities

Price Effect

on Revenues

Volume Effect

on Revenues

Cost Effect

on COGSOperational

Expenses

Volume Effect

on COGS

Jan-Dec/08

Oper. Income

Jan-Dec/09

Oper. Income

32

FULL YEAR 2009 SEGMENT RESULTS - DISTRIBUTION: Growing market share leading to higher sales increased earnings

(2,748) 3,282

1,452

(1,025) 1,146 813

(1,294)

(R$ MILLION)

o Decrease in prices for crude and product sales (petroleum:-15%;gas:-26%) partially offset by

production increase in Agbami ( Start up July 08) and Akpo (Start up March 09)

o Lower acquisition prices and higher refining margins in US and Japan contributed to COGS

decrease

o Reduced losses from devaluation of inventories (-R$ 261mi) and improvement in the

impairment account (2008:-330 mi; 2009:+7mi) explain lower expenses and gains in operating

margin

Price Effect

on RevenuesVolume Effect

on Revenues

Cost Effect

on COGSOperational

Expenses

Volume Effect

on COGS

Jan-Dec/08

Oper. Income

Jan-Dec/09

Oper. Income

33

FULLY YEAR 2009 SEGMENT RESULTS - INTERNATIONAL:Production growth and better refining margins improve results