by DantesPeak » Fri 10 Feb 2006, 11:07:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pip', 'I') got the new copy of Hydrocarbon Processing yesterday. They have an article about Mexico's clean fuels program. As part of the article they show a graph of future Mexican oil output by field with Olmeca, Istmo, and Maya (Cantarell). The projection according to Hydrocarbon Processing is showing Maya peaking next year at 1.6 MM bpd and then declining to zero by 2016. I had heard of the steep decline expected but it’s still surprising to see 0 BPD from Cantarell in 10 years.
The bizarre thing is that the article throws up this semi-shocking chart showing Mexican oil production dropping by 2/3 in the next ten years and doesn’t make any mention of the problems that may cause. The only reference to the chart is for talking about how the crude qualities will change with Mayan out of the mix.
Thanks. This is incredibly bad. Pemex has commented on the WSJ story:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')FX Asia Focus Copyright 2006 AFX News Limited 9 Feb 2006 Mexican oil output could drop sharply - report
Pemex says it is confident it can make up for any decline at Cantarell by squeezing more output from other fields, but some analysts outside the company are far less sanguine. The study was carried out last year by Pemex experts.
'I am confident in Pemex's portfolio of assets. Other fields will be able to substitute (Cantarell's output) and increase production,' Juan Jose Suarez Coppel, the company's chief financial officer, said in an interview. Pemex predicts Mexico's output will actually grow this year to 3.42 mln barrels a day from 3.33 mln barrels last year.
But the study already prompted the company in December to predict a slightly sharper decline at Cantarell than its previous forecasts -- with output down 6 pct this year to an average rate of 1.9 mln barrels a day and off to 1.43 mln barrels as an average for 2008. That prediction now roughly matches the study's most optimistic scenario.