The not-yet widespread Brazilian bilateral power contract — where consumers can choose their power supplier — expanded its power consumption by 4.7pc in January compared to a year earlier.
The power consumption in bilateral contracts reached 22,522MW on average in January, according to data released by the power clearing chamber CCEE.
The regulated market, where households and small business must purchase their power, reduced power consumption in January to 44,228MW on average, a 3.2pc reduction in annual comparison.
The total power demand in Brazil's power grid was 66,751MW on average last month, 0.7pc smaller than the same month last year.
CCEE says the reduction in total demand is because of more consumers migrating to the bilateral contract market, shifting away from power demand hired by local power distribution companies. If the demand from consumers that migrated off the local distributor were not counted, the regulated consumption would have increased by 0.8pc.
More consumers opting to install solar panels on their homes also caused the reduction of demand in January.

