Mexico:
Ethanol plan meets resistance
By
Alex Manda
The
Herald
MEXICO
Petroleumworld.com
05 29 07
Mexico´s plans for a big push to encourage the use of bioethanol
in fuel are caught in a wrangle with the state oil monopoly Petróleos
Mexicanos (Pemex), according to Osiel Castro de la Rosa, a National
Action Party (PAN) deputy from the state of Veracruz.
"
On Thursday, we had a meeting with the Pemex board ... they had technical
objections to ethanol, saying that adapting facilities would be too
expensive," Castro said at sugar cane industry forum in Veracruz.
"These objections (have been) ... overcome. We now have to
design a minimum pricing scheme that will be profitable for Pemex
and will offer sugarcane producers an income," he said.
The
issue is crucial in Veracruz state, which produced around 40 percent
of
the nation´s sugar cane last year.
At
the end of April, Congress passed a bill to promote the use of
ethanol
made
from sugar as part of the nation´s gasoline mix,
instead of imported additive methyl tetra butyl ether (MTBE), an
additive which is already banned in many U.S. states.
However,
President Calderón still has not signed the bill
into law, in large part because of Pemex objections, experts at the
forum said.
"The import price of MTBE was crucial. Because of transport
costs the company comes out better if it is produced in Mexico. It
has to be imported by sea, not via pipelines. The expense of transport
was the factor that made understand," Castro said.
The
April legislation called for the replacement of MTBE, which represents
6 percent
of Mexico´s gasoline by volume and called
for "substituting MTBE imports with the production of ethanol,
saving a substantial amount of resources which we are currently spending
on imports," he added.
In November last year, Sergio Trindade, president of SE2T International,
a consultancy that led a Mexican government study of biofuels, said
Mexico could save US$2 billion a year by switching from imported
MTBE to domestically produced ethanol.Trindade also said that doing
so would require nearly 412,000 cubic meters of ethanol a year by
2012.
Speaking
at the Veracruz conference, Eduardo Macías, a senior
administrator at the Fondo de Empresas Expropiadas del Sector Azucarero,
a state body that administers sugar companies that have gone into
bankruptcy, also complained that the legislation left a lot of gray
areas.
"To give just one example, the legislation says ethanol will
be 10 percent by volume in major urban centers, but does not say
which cities are considered major urban centers," he said.
Meanwhile, some sugarcane producers who are interested in bioethanol
have decided that it makes more sense to bypass government-brokered
plans altogether.
Porfirio
Alva Pérez of Chontalpa Cane Workers United, which
is based in the state of Tabasco, said the association has agreed
to build a joint venture ethanol facility with German biotech and
engineering firm Frings.
"We are going to start building a 119,000-liter-a-day plant
in October this year," Alva said. "If other associations
see it is working, we are looking at another 500,000-liter facility
that we could start building the following September," Alva
said.
The deal came about because members of the 3,500-strong Chontalpa
cooperative had traveled to Spain, then to Germany, to investigate
bioethanol.
Frings is supplying 80 percent of the projects start-up costs and
will have a 30 percent stake initially, and will buy 100 percent
of the ethanol produced.
"We had initially approached government officials about this,
but they weren´t interested," Alva said.
By
Alex Manda/Special to The Herald Mexico
El Universal
Lunes 28 de mayo de 2007
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