Thursday, August 7, 2025

Mexico Oil Privatization will Result in “Profound Changes”

For the first time since 1938, Mexico’s oil frontier is open for business. Mexico’s newly privatized oil industry was officially signed into law on August 11, 2014, ending Petróleos Mexicanos’ (Pemex) 76 year nationalization reign on the country’s hydrocarbon resources. Pemex provides roughly one-third of Mexico’s tax revenue, but years of corruption and inefficiency have cut sharply into its production. The company has lost roughly $8 billion to date in 2014, according to Reuters. Volumes for Q2’14 dipped to 2,468 MBOEPD, and management expects overall output for 2014 to average 2,441 MBOEPD. If the numbers prove to be accurate, production will have declined by 36% since 2004 (3,848 MBOEPD), or an annual average of roughly 140 MBOEPD. If the entire ten year period is considered, the lost production of 1,407 MBOEPD is roughly equal to Q2’14 volumes produced by both Apache Corp. (ticker: APA, 636 MBOEPD) and Occidental Petroleum (ticker: OXY, 741 MBOEPD).

Mexico Prepares for Hydrocarbon Bidding War; Supermajors Lie in Wait

For 76 years, Mexico’s state-owned oil company Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, has been the government-enforced monopoly over all of the country’s oil and gas industry efforts. Roughly one-third of all of Mexico’s tax revenues is derived from Pemex, according to Reuters. Like many other countries with government-owned oil and gas monopolies, Mexico has not reinvested enough in Pemex for it

U.S. and Mexico to Jointly Develop Gulf of Mexico

An agreement between the U.S. and Mexico is prompting U.S. oil and gas offshore operators in the Gulf of Mexico to brush up on their Spanish. The passage of H.R. 1613 in the U.S. House of Representative is expected to establish a transboundary agreement to allow joint energy development projects between U.S. energy companies and the Mexican state owned oil

The Old Guard is Back in Mexico, But Something's New

On Sunday July 1, 2012, Mexicans went to the polls to cast their vote for president. Election authorities predict that Enrique Pena Nieto as the winner. The 45-year old former governor of the state of Tabasco, who is married to a Mexican soap opera star, was estimated to have captured approximately 38% of the vote, 7% more than his nearest