Raizen owners end talks to rescue struggling sugar producer, Bloomberg News reports

Fuel tanks stand inside a Raizen Distribution Terminal in Sao Paulo, Brazil August 20, 2025. REUTERS

(Reuters) – Talks to rescue Brazilian sugar and ethanol producer Raizen have fallen ​apart after co-owners Cosan and Shell failed to agree ‌to a plan to raise capital, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.
Earlier in the day, Shell’s Brazil ​CEO said the company was committed to investing ​3.5 billion reais ($662.75 million) in the world’s largest sugar ⁠producer and that it also expected another shareholder to ​be able to shore up Raizen’s fortunes with an ​additional investment of 3.5 billion reais.
Cosan said it cannot match the financial support Shell had agreed to offer Raizen, while some other offers ​made by Cosan were rejected by Shell, the report ​said, citing a person.
Private equity funds managed by Banco BTG Pactual  ‌also ⁠involved in the talks, disagreed with several terms proposed by Shell and decided against injecting money into Raizen, the report said.
Raizen, Cosan, and Shell did not immediately respond to ​Reuters requests for ​comment. Reuters ⁠could not immediately verify the report.
Last month, Raizen posted a quarterly net loss of 15.6 ​billion reais and warned of “significant uncertainty” about its ​ability ⁠to keep operating.
Raizen’s net debt climbed to 55.3 billion reais by the end of December due to a combination of ⁠heavy ​investments, erratic weather and wildfires, which ​led to weaker harvests and lower crushing volumes.
($1 = 5.2810 reais).

Reporting by Abu ​Sultan in Bengaluru; Editing by Sonia Cheema and Subhranshu Sahu

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