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  • This is Comperj.

  • The biggest petrochemical complex in Brazil.

  • It's located in Itaboraí, a small city in the state of Rio de Janeiro.

  • The multibillion dollar project launched in 2008 and the plan was to open in 2011.

  • Thousands of Brazilians moved there to work.

  • But it's 2018, and Comperj never opened.

  • Construction of the complex stopped in 2015, after it became a symbol of the largest corruption

  • scandal in Brazil's history -- Operation Car Wash.

  • Hundreds of prominent Brazilians including CEOs, members of Congress and even a former

  • President have been implicated.

  • Some of Brazil's largest companies lost billions of dollars and the country slid further

  • into recession.

  • Four years since it broke, the scandal is still rippling through Brazil, leaving places

  • like Itaboraí devastated in its wake.

  • Itaboraí was the perfect place for one of Brazil's most ambitious energy projects.

  • It had the space for 2 refineries and a petrochemical plant - spanning 45 square kilometers.

  • It's also close to Brazil's newly discovered natural gas fields off the coast of Rio and

  • Sao Paulo.

  • When the project launched, it was estimated that Comperj would generate 200,000 direct

  • and indirect jobs in the area.

  • Itaboraí became a boomtown.

  • In 2010, 50,000 people moved there, 160 new businesses opened, and Itaboraí's population

  • grew by over 16%.

  • But 1,200 kilometers away, police broke a case that would doom Comperj.

  • In 2012, they had this gas station, in Brasilia, under surveillance.

  • They suspected it was being used to launder money.

  • Criminals would bring in illegal cash, report it as gas station earnings, and then funnel

  • the cash to someone else - making the money hard to trace back.

  • The police arrested a known money-launderer, Alberto Youssef, and offered him a plea deal

  • in exchange for the source of the money.

  • But he warned his lawyers: “If I speak, the Republic is going to fall”.

  • Youssef testified that he was laundering money, not for criminals, but for top executives

  • at Petrobras, Brazil's state-owned oil company.

  • Petrobras was the largest oil company in Latin America.

  • It also owned Comperj.

  • The police launched a massive investigation -- Operation Car Wash -- and soon discovered

  • Petrobras was at the center of an intricate corruption scheme.

  • The company used its projects to enrich criminals, engineering companies, and Brazilian government

  • officials.

  • Here's how it worked in the Comperj project:

  • When Petrobras needed to build the complex, it started a bidding process for the job.

  • Typically, engineering firms would compete for the contract, driving down the price for

  • Petrobras.

  • But a group of these companies got together and formed an agreement.

  • Instead of competing against each other, they cooperated to fix prices and take turns accepting

  • projects.

  • Odebrecht, the biggest firm and ring leader of this cartel, won some of the major contracts

  • to build Comperj.

  • This allowed Odebrecht to overcharge Petrobras, and profit immensely.

  • The original cost for Comperj was about $6 billion. By 2015 Petrobras has paid at

  • least $14 billion.

  • Odebrecht then money laundered some of its profits through outside businesses, like the

  • gas station before paying bribes to Petrobras executives and politicians.

  • Petrobras executives would take the bribes as incentive to keep giving contracts exclusively to the

  • cartel.

  • Politicians took the bribes in exchange for their influence over Petrobras.

  • Like Rio de Janeiro's state governor, Sergio Cabral, who received more than $800,000 to

  • give Comperj contracts to a firm in the cartel.

  • This also became an important funding source for their reelection campaigns.

  • "Brazil's Petrobras, one of the world's biggest oil companies in a heap of trouble."

  • "The company's in the midst of an escalating corruption scandal."

  • After the scandal broke, Petrobras and the engineering companies were in trouble.

  • Over two dozen executives were initially arrested.

  • Compounded by falling oil prices, Petrobras lost half its stock value between September

  • 2014 and January 2015

  • Construction on Comperj was incomplete when 13,000 workers were laid off.

  • Today, in Itaborai, 40,000 people are signed up for the city's employment program.

  • An average of 250 people line up here in search of odd jobs.

  • Many of these unemployed residents used to work at Comperj.

  • The massive layoffs at Comperj, affected the rest of the city as well.

  • With Brazil's economy still trying to recover from a recession, Itaborai has found it hard

  • to bounce back on its own.

  • Today, some limited construction is planned to resume at Comperj after Chinese and Brazilian

  • firms partnered with Petrobras.

  • The natural gas unit is expected to open there in 2020.

  • But this would only create about 5,000 jobs And the problem is, the closing of Comperj

  • and devastation of Itaboraí is not an isolated incidentit happened all over Brazil.

  • And all over Latin America.

  • Operation Car Wash successfully revealed systemic corruption in Brazil.

  • Car Wash put ex-President Luiz InácioLulada Silva in jail, contributed to the downfall

  • of his successor Dilma Rousseff, and a related investigation has led to her successor Michel

  • Temer, being charged for corruption.

  • The ex-CEO of Odebrecht was sentenced to 19 years in prison.

  • Eike Batista, once Brazil's richest man was sentenced to 30 years.

  • But the same companies were funding major infrastructure projects all over Brazil.

  • So the scandal brought many to an abrupt stop.

  • This nuclear power plant in Angra dos Reis,

  • for instance.

  • Like Comperj, it was halted in 2015 because of direct involvement in the Car Wash scheme.

  • $60 million in bribes were paid out of the project's funding.

  • By 2016 , 11 projects were reportedly stalled in Brazil alone.

  • It didn't stop there.

  • The engineering companies involved worked all over Latin America and in 2016, 17 projects

  • were reportedly stalled in at least 7 countries.

  • Like this irrigation project in Peru.

  • Where 3 former presidents have been accused of taking bribes from Odebrecht.

  • In Colombia, this river dredging project was stopped after Odebrecht admitted to paying

  • $11 million in bribes.

  • And in Venezuela, at least 23 infrastructure projects have been suspended.

  • These stalled projects mean lots of layoffs.

  • A report estimates the Car Wash scandal wiped out 500,000 jobs in Brazil alone.

  • Over four years after the scandal broke, Brazil's unemployment is still high.

  • Operation Car Wash is a blessing and a curse.

  • On one hand, it's uncovering systemic corruption that has plagued Brazil for decades.

  • But on the other, it's threatening Brazil's democracy.

  • For many, the prosecution of prominent leaders, especially Lula, who was imprisoned at a time

  • when he was leading in the elections polls, has revealed a bias in Brazil's judicial system.

  • The elections are now the most divisive in the country's history, with many losing

  • faith in their political leaders.

This is Comperj.

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