Mexico's
plan to open oil industry lacks support
MEXICO
Petroleumworld.com, Feb 29, 2008
Mexican President Felipe Calderon's
plan to overhaul energy laws and allow private investment
in the state oil monopoly lacks political support, a prominent
opposition senator said.
Senator Francisco Labastida of the Institutional Revolutionary
Party, an opposition group, said ``there's no chance''
that ``comprehensive reform'' will pass. He spoke in an
interview today at the senate building in Mexico City.
Failure to open the oil industry may mark the biggest
political defeat yet for Calderon, who managed to win support
for cutting pensions and raising taxes since taking office
in December 2006. Mexico, the third-largest oil supplier
to the U.S., needs the help of foreign and private companies
to halt a decline in crude output and reserves, Calderon
has said.
Cantarell, the nation's largest oil field, is running
out of crude. Taxes that exceed half of sales at state
oil company Petroleos Mexicanos cut into its ability to
invest in production.
Labastida, head of the Senate Energy Committee, said a
narrower proposal to allow Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex,
to form alliances in offshore fields near the U.S. border
faces less opposition and may pass. Such alliances would
have to be with other government-controlled companies such
as Petroleo Brasileiro SA or StatoilHydro ASA, he said.
``We may start in ultra-deep waters near the international
border, where the United States is already drilling,''
Labastida said. ``Most of us, I wouldn't say all, believe
we should do something about border fields.''
By doing so, Pemex would acquire the technology it needs
to expand to other parts of the Gulf of Mexico, the senator
said.
The Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, believes
that Petroleos Mexicanos may be able to raise capital by
selling equity-like securities in certain subsidiaries
to Mexican investors, he said.
Story
Carlos Manuel Rodriguez and Adriana Lopez Caraveo from Bloomberg.
- adrianalopez@bloomberg.net, Crodriguez17@bloomberg.net
Bloomberg 28 02 08
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