Pemex
sets oil output goal of 3.1 mln barrels a day
By
Thomas Black
Bloomberg
QUITO
Petroleumworld.com
06 29 07
Petroleos Mexicanos, the third- biggest oil
supplier to the U.S., set a goal of producing an average of 3.1 million
barrels of crude oil per day until 2012, even as output at its largest
oil field declines.
Pemex, as Mexico's oil monopoly is known, won't spare any expense
to optimize the production of Cantarell, the offshore oil field where
output declined by 12 percent last year, to help keep production
from slipping under 3.1 million barrels per day, said Chief Executive
Officer Jesus Reyes Heroles.
``We want to make Cantarell a true example in terms of technical
optimization of its exploitation,'' Reyes Heroles said at a conference
in the Gulf of Mexico port city of Veracruz. ``We won't skimp on
economic nor human resources.''
Production at Cantarell, the world's third-largest oil field, declined
17 percent in the first five months of 2007 from the same period
a year ago, driving down Mexico's overall crude production to 3.15
million barrels. In May, production dropped to 3.11 million barrels
per day, the lowest this year.
Pemex last year produced 3.26 million barrels of oil per day and
saw daily production peak at 3.38 million barrels in 2004. Cantarell's
rate of decline so far this year has outpaced a Pemex forecast of
a 15 percent average drop for 2007.
Ghawar in Saudi Arabia is the world's largest oil field, followed
by Burgan in Kuwait.
Reserves
At the conference, Reyes Heroles also set as goals boosting the
replacement of proven reserves to more than 100 percent by 2012 or
2013 and raising natural gas production by more than the increase
in local demand to eventually eliminate the need for gas imports.
In 2006, Pemex replaced only 41 percent of its proven oil and gas
reserves, leaving the company with reserves that will last 9.3 years
at current production rates. Pemex in March reported proven oil and
gas reserves of 15.5 billion barrels as of Jan. 1, down from 16.5
billion a year earlier.
Natural gas production has been one of the bright spots for Pemex.
Daily production for the first five months of the year averaged 5.87
billion cubic feet, a 10 percent increase from last year's average
of 5.36 billion cubic feet.
Reyes Heroles said one of Pemex's biggest challenges is to learn
how to manage multiple, large drilling projects to tap reserves in
Gulf of Mexico waters more than 600 meters deep and in Chicontepec,
a large field in the rugged terrain of southeastern Mexico.
Tax Reform
Reyes Heroles also called on the audience of oil industry professionals
to support a tax bill that President Felipe Calderon introduced into
Congress last week. Reyes Heroles dropped his stance that Pemex needs
further reduction in taxes to free up resources for exploration and
production after Mexican Finance Minister Agustin Carstens said last
week Pemex could receive more funding from Congress instead of lower
duties.
``The success of the tax reform is a priority for everyone,'' Reyes
Heroles said. ``As the finance minister pointed out, the possibility
for Pemex to receive more funds won't be solved by changing the company's
tax law, but by improving the government's finances.''
Congress in 2005 approved a tax law that reduced Pemex's tax rate
in 2006 to 55 percent of revenue from 63 percent in 2005. Pemex is
still one of the most heavily taxed oil companies in the world. Pemex
last year paid 584.4 billion ($53.7 billion) in taxes, or 93 percent
of its pretax income, compared with 604.2 billion pesos in 2005,
or 115 percent of pretax income.
To contact the reporters on this story: Thomas Black in Monterrey
at tblack@bloomberg.net
Bloomberg 27
06 07
Copyright© 2007 Bloomberg. All
Rights Reserved.