Business | Oil & Gas
Mexico's new energy plan could attract foreign firms
Mexico's government handed Congress a compromise energy reform plan on Tuesday that could attract foreign companies to a hunt for new oil reserves to rescue falling output in the world's No 5 crude producer.
Mexico City: Mexico's government handed Congress a compromise energy reform plan on Tuesday that could attract foreign companies to a hunt for new oil reserves to rescue falling output in the world's No 5 crude producer.
It is President Felipe Calderon's most ambitious economic reform attempt yet but Mexico is wary of private involvement in the cherished oil sector, which has been in state hands since 1938.
The government plan omits controversial risk-sharing alliances but would let state oil monopoly Pemex sweeten service contracts with private companies by adding performance-based incentives, deputy energy minister Jordy Herrera said.
"We must act now because time and oil is running out," Calderon said in a televised address to the nation. He said the overhaul would strengthen Pemex and give it greater autonomy. "To strengthen Pemex is to strengthen Mexico," he said.
Watered down reform
The reform, watered down to exclude risk-sharing contracts after months of wrangling with the opposition, should speed up new exploration and production projects and could also see new refineries built, Herrera told a briefing with foreign media.
"The central idea is to give Pemex more flexibility in working with outside companies," he said.
Mexico is a top supplier of US crude, and oil exports provide some 40 per cent of the government revenues.
But oil output and reserves are both declining and Pemex lacks the technology and resources to explore for more crude in the deep waters of Mexico's Gulf as fast as it needs to.
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