Mexico's
PEMEX oil company in financial trouble
By
Greg Flakus
Voice of America - VOA
Houston
Petroleumworld.com
03 28 07
Mexico's state-owned oil company, Petroleos Mexicanos, better known
as Pemex, celebrated its 69th birthday on March 18, amid concerns
that it is on the brink of insolvency and its production is falling.
As VOA's Greg Flakus reports from Houston, Mexico, still has plenty
of oil, but internal politics prevent the investment needed to develop
the resources.
At the close of President Bush's visit to Mexico two weeks ago, a
Mexican reporter asked if the two men had discussed the issue of oil.
President Bush, for his part, said oil had not been a topic of discussion
since energy is a Mexican domestic issue, not a bilateral issue. President
Calderon repeated his oft-stated position on energy reform.
He said he does not have any plan to privatize Pemex,
but he said Mexico will have to address the problem of falling production
at some point and that this will be a matter of discussion between
the president and the Congress.
Mr. Calderon has made clear that he, like Presidents
Vicente Fox and Ernesto Zedillo before him, sees a need for energy
reform. When Mexico expropriated the oil industry in 1938, the idea
was to keep the resources in Mexican hands and enrich the nation with
oil profits. In recent years, however, it has become clear that Pemex
is not up to the task of finding and developing all the resources
under the ground, or more to the point, under the waters of the Gulf
of Mexico, where its largest producing field, known as Cantarell,
is now in sharp decline.
But nationalist politicians have blocked reform, claiming
any change in the constitution that would even allow a slight opening
to private investment would eventually lead to full privatization
of the state-owned energy sector.
George Baker, an oil analyst who publishes the Mexico
Energy Intelligence newsletter in Houston, says Mr. Calderon's razor-thin
victory in last year's election and subsequent charges of fraud from
the opposition have put him in a tough spot.
"There is still a very strong shadow from the
2006 elections and that means that it would be politically delicate
for the government, at this point, so early in its career, to push
forward a radical change, which this would be, in petroleum policy,"
Baker said.
In Mexico, many citizens still respond to the old
slogan that "the oil is ours," even though they see no direct
benefits. Oil revenue accounts for about a third of the government's
receipts, but Mexicans generally pay more for gasoline than people
in neighboring countries and there is no dividend payment distributed
to the citizens from oil revenue.
Some Mexican politicians have argued that all Pemex
needs is internal reform, but George Baker says that won't work.
"To improve Pemex, you need to have a view that
is not Pemex-centric," he said. "You need to have a view
that looks beyond Pemex and that any particular effort to reform Pemex,
as an effort in itself, will not succeed."
Pemex owes creditors $107 billion, equal to almost
all its assets. Petroleum reserves are the state's, not Pemex's, property.
Since the government takes most of its revenue, Pemex does not have
the money to pay its debts, let alone develop the technology it would
need to find and produce more petroleum.
Baker says Mexico's hand may soon be forced by private
development on the border between the United States-controlled area
of the Gulf and Mexican waters. The Shell Oil company has a well on
the US side of the boundary that could go into operation as early
as 2010. Although no one can know for sure, it is possible that such
a well would also draw some oil from deep rock on the Mexican side.
In a conference call this week, Pemex officials said
they have identified 230 prospects for drilling in Mexico's Gulf waters,
but the company only drilled four wells last year. At that rate, George
Baker says, it would take 58 years to exploit those resources. The
Houston analyst says Mexico needs to allow outside oil companies to
operate there.
"In the Mexican side of the Gulf of Mexico, there
is room for 20 or 30 companies to be actively drilling," Baker
said. "Pemex, by its own, cannot drill 230 deepwater prospects.
Pemex is not prepared to deal with deepwater exploration on a major
scale and it is certainly not prepared to deal with deepwater production
because it has never done that before and it does not have the experience
or the resources to make that happen."
Baker says one proposal that might find support in
Mexico would involve opening 20 percent of the energy sector to private
companies, with Pemex maintaining 80 percent control. He says private
companies, from the United States and elsewhere, have the technology
and expertise necessary to develop the resources in Mexico, thereby
boosting the country's overall production. He says other countries
with state-owned oil companies that have tried this formula, like
Norway, found that it not only improved production, but reduced corruption
and brought greater efficiency to their operations.
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of America - VOA 26
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