Houston Chronicle Sunday

Mexicans running on fumes in gas shortage

Efforts to curb illegal pipelines cause headaches

- By Amy Stillman

Hugo Ramirez Sanchez walked an hour to find an open fuel station in the Cuauhtemoc neighborho­od of Mexico City, after his car ran out of gasoline. Jorge Mendoza had a stressful 50-minute drive from his home on an almost empty tank.

Across central Mexico, drivers are running on empty or lining up for hours at service stations, as the government’s efforts to rein in fuel theft compound a nationwide gasoline shortage. More than one-fourth of Mexico City’s 400 gasoline stations are facing problems, Mexico City mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said in a Twitter video, while assuring viewers that supply would normalize Wednesday. The states of Mexico, Hidalgo, Jalisco, Michoacan, Guanajuato and Queretaro are among the worst affected.

The distributi­on issues have exacerbate­d bottleneck­s at Mexico’s ports, where fuel tankers have been waiting to unload their cargoes following weather-related ports closures.

“The government is saying it’s not a shortage, but this is a shortage,” said Mendoza, gesturing at the two lines of cars snaking down the street from the Pemex-branded fuel station. “Now I am going to be late for my clients and maybe they won’t call me back.”

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has sought to curb rampant gasoline theft, which costs state-owned Petroleos Mexicanos about $3.5 billion a year. But his strategy has caused major distributi­on delays at a time of high seasonal demand.

To stop the theft, the government has shut and increased surveillan­ce of pipelines, relying on slower-moving — and more expensive — tanker trucks to transport fuel across the country. It’s also deployed the army to Pemex fuel terminals and refineries, which are already operating at about a third of their capacity due to prolonged maintenanc­e cycles and under-investment. The country also lacks fuel storage infrastruc­ture.

Mexico City’s key Tuxpan-Azcapotzal­co fuel pipeline has been down after numerous illegal taps, causing further delivery delays, President Lopez Obrador said during his morning press conference on Thursday. He also said that Mexico is producing about 200,000 barrels of gasoline a day.

At least 15 tankers carrying 2.3 million barrels of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel were waiting late Wednesday at the port of Pajaritos to unload, with some there since December 25, shipping reports seen by Bloomberg show. Another 14 tankers with 3.5 million barrels waited to discharge at Tuxpan and seven more carrying 840,000 barrels are at Tampico. Demurrage, or fees for detaining vessels beyond the scheduled time, typically run about $22,000 to $24,000 a day.

The fight against illegal pipeline taps by fuel thieves known as “huachicole­ros” will take some time, and gasoline supply will begin to normalize bit by bit, Lopez Obrador said in an interview with El Financiero Bloomberg TV. “We have enough gasoline, there’s no problem, it’s a matter of distributi­on,” he said.

Many Mexicans, however, are running out of patience. “Why didn’t the president consult citizens about this plan like he’s done with everything else?” said Mendoza. “This is not panic purchasing. If I don’t fill up my car right now, I’m screwed.”

“This is not panic purchasing. If I don’t fill up my car right now, I’m screwed.” Jorge Mendoza, Mexico City resident

 ??  ?? Across Mexico City, drivers are lining up for hours at service stations, as the efforts to rein in fuel theft compound a gasoline shortage.
Across Mexico City, drivers are lining up for hours at service stations, as the efforts to rein in fuel theft compound a gasoline shortage.

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