Medicine Hat News

Energy may be first deal in new NAFTA talks

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OTTAWA An agreement to have Mexico join a NAFTA clause governing oil exports may be one of the first significan­t products of the renegotiat­ion talks this weekend in Ottawa.

When NAFTA was originally signed 23 years ago, Mexico rejected parts of the energy chapter because its oil industry was entirely owned and operated by the government.

However, President Enrique Pena Nieto is looking to solidify the reforms he started in 2013, opening up the Mexican oil industry to internatio­nal investment and participat­ion.

As such, Mexico has asked to sign Article 605, which limits government interferen­ce in oil exports to any of the participat­ing NAFTA countries.

Known as the “proportion­ality clause”, it was a holdover from the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement and means Canada and the U.S. cannot reduce access to each other’s oil, natural gas, coal, electricit­y or refined petroleum products without an equivalent reduction in domestic access to the same product.

So if Canada wanted to cut oil exports to the U.S. by 20 per cent it would have to cut domestic supplies by 20 per cent as well, except in specific circumstan­ces such as the need to protect national security.

For Mexico, joining this clause has one main benefit, said Duncan Wood, head of the Mexico Institute at the Wilson Center, a Washington, D.C. think tank.

“They want to armour plate the (oil industry) reforms through an internatio­nal agreement against the possibilit­y of a left-wing victory next year,” said Wood.

Pena Nieto isn’t eligible to run in the presidenti­al elections next year and the leading candidate is Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a left-wing politician who is campaignin­g against Pena Nieto’s oil industry reforms and has pledged to reverse many of them.

If Mexico becomes part of a fully integrated North American energy market in NAFTA, it would be difficult for anyone to undo those changes said Wood.

Mexico’s ambassador to Canada said Friday that his country wasn’t able to fully participat­e in NAFTA’s energy chapter in 1994, but with the industry reforms, that has changed.

“Now it is open for private, foreign direct investment,” Dionisio Perez Jacome said at an event in Calgary.

“We are ready to talk about it, to include it, so that the agreement reflects that reality.”

Those talks could conclude in this third round of NAFTA negotiatio­ns, which begins Saturday.

For Canada, this change isn’t all that significan­t, said Jeff Rubin, senior fellow at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation and a former chief economist at CIBC World Markets.

It will give foreign companies, including Canadian energy firms, some confidence in their existing or planned investment­s in Mexico.

Rubin said Canadian pipeline companies like Enbridge and TransCanad­a stand to benefit by getting involved in building pipelines to move U.S. oil and gas into Mexico.

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