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Page added on April 12, 2014

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‘Vast Opportunities’ Await U.S. Oil Moguls in Mexico

Business

As Mexico works to denationalize its oil and gas market after seven decades, billions of dollars of potential profits and opportunity are waiting to be scooped up.

However, swaths of people – mostly in Mexico — still oppose the change, and faced with cost and political challenges, the reform could take years to materialize.

Many fear foreign direct investment will siphon money away from crucial middle class programs and incite violence among gangs such as the Zetas heavily involved in the country’s oil and gas black market.

Others fear contracts won’t be negotiated properly, and that communities won’t benefit since the government – not the landowner — owns undiscovered reserves.

At the same time, the oil sector operated for close to 80 years as a national treasure; completely at the control of the Mexican government with state-owned Pemex operating a monopoly since 1938. In fact, March 18 — the day the oil industry was nationalized that year — has been celebrated as a national holiday for generations.

Pemex provides some 30% of the revenues of Mexico’s federal government. Relinquishing that control has some Mexicans on edge, and there have been mass protests tens of thousands of people strong in the capital Mexico City fighting the reform.

“For decades oil nationalization was built into a nationalized triumph,” said Noel Maurer, a professor at the Harvard Business School who has followed Mexico’s oil reform closely. “Reversing that is politically risky, and costly.”

Opinion polls have indicated that newly-installed Mexican President Enrique Nieto’s approval ratings have fallen since passing the controversial oil reform law in December.

A more detailed framework for the reform is expected to be announced later this month.

Of course, Nieto’s argument has long been that denationalization will improve the Mexican economy. And his supporters claim it’s the best thing to happen to Mexico since the 1994 North America Free Trade Agreement.

Reform, they say, introduces Mexico to the global energy stage, breathing new life into the country’s most profitable sector.

“It was about time,” said University of San Diego international business professor Jaime Alonso Gomez who has been following the reform. “It is something that financially, institutionally, and culturally introduces Mexico and its regulatory agencies in the global arena.”

Foreign investment will help Mexico tap ultra-deep-water reserves and adopt advanced U.S. exploration methods, potentially helping to stem declining Mexican oil production — down 25% from its 2004 peak to 2.5 million barrels per day, according to the Boston Consulting Group.

As production increases, more money will be funneled to state coffers in Mexico, which the government promises will provide a new source of tax-revenue in a country notoriously low taxed for much-needed improvements to run-down programs like education and public transportation.

“The country needs money to develop offshore deep water fields and onshore conventional and unconventionals,” Maurer said. “With foreign capital, it can boost production, and then tax it.”

Pemex has been unable to successfully replace maturing reserves. In fact, from 2000 through 2012, every major oil-producing region in the world added to proven reserves except for Mexico, according to BCG. That has led to a decline in Mexico’s reserves to the 18th largest in the world from 12th 15 years ago.

Over the next two years, the government will erect a new framework to manage the energy industry, striking profit-sharing contracts with foreign oil companies in a bid to improve those numbers.

This is expected to provide enormous investment opportunities for oil giants in the U.S. operating just north of the border.

With 76% of Mexico’s resources in deep water and shale formations, Mexico will likely try to woo contracts with energy giants like Exxon Mobile (XOM), Chevron (CVX) and BP (BP) with extensive experience in water drilling and shale.

They’ll be tapped to construct and manage new refineries, build pipeline capacity and gas storage and transport facilities.

“Mexico is poised to become a genuinely competitive and attractive investment destination in the global energy landscape,” BCG said in a new report. “Historic reforms will shake up and open its underperforming energy sector and go a long way toward modernizing Mexico’s economy.”

However, reform will take time. And Maurer said widespread success is at least another decade out, with production from foreign operators likely beginning five years or so from now.

“There are huge opportunities in the Gulf of Mexico but the amount of capital needed is huge,” Maurer said. Challenges such as these will “slow it down,” he said.

fox business



6 Comments on "‘Vast Opportunities’ Await U.S. Oil Moguls in Mexico"

  1. Davy, Hermann, MO on Sat, 12th Apr 2014 12:01 pm 

    “FOX” part of the American exceptionalism lobby of plenty and human technological prowess . It is great that North American has more potential for oil supplies in this unstable world. The problem for what remains in Mexico is the same as the US. It is unconventional and expensive. All you have to do is read our resident guru “SHORTONOIL” to recognize the whole picture. When the financial market corrects and the cost of money rises significantly the cost of this oil will begin to drift out of the “goldilocks range” of affordability. Big oil capex per oil produced is already going through a compression. I hope this will buy us some more time and we will see the financial repression last a little more. Give me 3 more years of calm and plenty and I will have my long term life boat finished. I am good on the other short term lifeboat leg. I need two legs to stand on.

  2. Kenz300 on Sat, 12th Apr 2014 1:22 pm 

    Faux Noise — speaking for the top 1%………

  3. rockman on Sat, 12th Apr 2014 3:22 pm 

    “relinquishing that control…” No control is being relinquished… none… zip… nada. Just as the US gov’t hasn’t “relinquished” control over their mineral leases. They have a very long and detailed set of rules companies must follow or they lose the leases.

    Second, we need to see how the new rules can be handled by Big Oil PUBLIC COMPANIES. US pubcos could have been participating with PEMEX as a non-operating partner for years. What stopped them was the fact that ownership of any oil/NG developed would not be assigned to the pubco until it reached the surface. IOW the company couldn’t put it on their books as an asset by SEC regulations. And that is an extremely important consideration for any pubco. We still need to see the detailed new rules.

    And it isn’t just US companies waiting for the new game plan. China began snuggling up to the Mexican gov’t with regards to oil/NG production over a year ago. They’ve already begun a very small pilot program exporting oil to China. And there’s another angle for China to work: refining. Mexico may be a major oil exporter to the US but about 25% of the value of the oil they ship us is sent back to them as refined products. There have been hints that in exchange for China building refineries in Mexico and selling product cheap (or event cost) the gov’t would sell much more to China allowing them to export products back to the motherland.

    So again the “Golden Rule” modified: you don’t have to own the gold to make the rules… just have control over where the gold ends up.

  4. bobinget on Sat, 12th Apr 2014 6:16 pm 

    AS we all know, we can do just fine w/o Mexican oil imports, we have way too much shale, don’t ya know.

    from EIA:
    Country Analysis Brief Overview

    Mexico is a major non-OPEC oil producer and among the largest sources of U.S. oil imports.
    Mexico’s oil production has declined in recent years, as has its position as a net oil exporter to the United States.
    Mexico is a net importer of natural gas, mostly via pipeline from the United States, and its natural gas demand is rising due to greater use of the fuel for power generation.
    Most of Mexico’s electricity generation comes from conventional thermal plants, “the fuel source for which is increasingly (imported) natural gas”.

  5. bobinget on Sat, 12th Apr 2014 6:19 pm 

    Mexico has LNG EXPORT facilities. Watch for gas pipelines to be expanded to permit US natural gas to be re-exported. All perfectly legal.

  6. rockman on Sun, 13th Apr 2014 3:17 am 

    bob – Might happen in the future but found this report on the current status: “Since 2006, imports of LNG have made up the remainder of Mexico’s imported natural gas needs. Mexico’s LNG imports averaged about 0.4 Bcf/d in 2012, representing about 20% of its overall natural gas imports.”

    I also found a lot of plans for building more LNG import facilities in Mexico. Doesn’t sound like Mexico anticipates being a net NG exporter anytime soon.

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