Page added on March 12, 2008
State oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos has begun developing a natural gas field under 3,000 feet of water, the deepest the company has ventured into the Gulf of Mexico to date, the company posted on its Web site.
Pemex, as the company is known, discovered the Holok-Temoa hydrocarbons complex in 2006 after drilling the Lakach exploratory well. The move underscores Pemex’s need to develop higher-cost oil projects as its traditional fields run dry, such as the giant Cantarell field where output is in steep decline.
Pemex is playing catch up in deepwater. Oil majors operating in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico are developing oil projects in waters up to 9,000 feet. Mexican oil officials have suggested Pemex team up with outside firms to acquire deepwater technology and split capital costs, enabling the country to tap similar oil fields that are under development in the U.S.
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