Montreal Gazette

Mexican control of oilfields to end, bringing supply boom

- JOE CARROLL and BRADLEY OLSON BLOOMBERG NEWS

HOUSTON — The flood of North American crude oil is set to become a deluge as Mexico dismantles a 75-year-old barrier to foreign investment in its oilfields.

Plagued by almost a decade of slumping output that has degraded Mexico’s take from a $100-a-barrel oil market, President Enrique Peña Nieto is seeking an end to the state monopoly over one of the biggest crude resources in the Western Hemisphere. The doubling in Mexican oil output that Citigroup Inc. said may result from inviting internatio­nal explorers to drill would be equivalent to adding another Nigeria to world supply, or about 2.5 million barrels a day.

That boom would augment a supply surge from U.S. and Canadian wells that Exxon Mobil Corp. predicts will vault North American production ahead of every OPEC member except Saudi Arabia within two years. With U.S. refineries already choking on more oil than they can process, producers from Exxon to ConocoPhil­lips are clamouring for repeal of the export restrictio­ns that have outlawed most overseas sales of American crude for four decades.

“This is going to be a huge opportunit­y for any kind of player” in the energy sector, said Pablo Medina, a Latin American upstream analyst at Wood Mackenzie Ltd. in Houston. “All the companies are going to have to turn their heads and start analyzing Mexico.”

The revolution in shale drilling that boosted U.S. oil output to a 25-year high this month will allow North America to join the ranks of the world’s crude-exporting continents by 2040, Exxon said in its annual global energy forecast on Dec. 12. Europe and the Asia-Pacific region will be the sole crude import markets by that date, the Irving, Texas-based energy producer said.

Exxon’s forecast, compiled annually by a team of company economists, scientists and engineers, didn’t take into account any changes in Mexico, William Colton, the company’s vice-president of strategic planning, said during a presentati­on at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington last Thursday.

Opening Mexico’s oilfields to foreign investment would be “a win-win if ever there was one,” said Colton, who described the move as “very good for the people of Mexico and people everywhere in the world who use energy.”

The bill ending the state monopoly was approved by the Mexican Congress last week. Before becoming law, the proposal must be ratified by state assemblies, most of which are controlled by proponents of the reform.

Though some foreign companies already operate in Mexico under service contracts with Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, the reform could increase foreign investment by as much as $15 billion annually and boost potential economic growth by half a percentage point, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a Nov. 28 report.

A doubling in production as suggested by Citigroup’s Ed Morse would put Mexican output at five million barrels a day, an unpreceden­ted level for Pemex, the state oil company created during nationaliz­ation in 1938.

The U.S. and Canada are expected to produce a combined 17.6 million barrels of crude and ethanol in 2015, rising to 18.7 million in 2020 and 19 million in 2040, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? An oil worker handles a drill on the Centenario deepwater drilling platform off the coast of Veracruz. Mexico is opening its oil industry to private and foreign investment.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES An oil worker handles a drill on the Centenario deepwater drilling platform off the coast of Veracruz. Mexico is opening its oil industry to private and foreign investment.

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