NGI


The natural gas market in Mexico is a new opportunity for private sector producers, as firms begin to analyze alternative possibilities, according to a research note from consultancy Talanza.

“Natural gas has become a worldwide commodity, and particularly in Mexico, a scarce one,” Talanza analyst Daniela Flores said. “In that sense, natural gas-producing companies must capitalize on their production and turn it into profit.”

Mexico, which imports most of its gas from the United States, has been importing more than its domestic production since 2015. This is in part because of declining domestic production from Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex), but is also because of the abundance of cheap gas north of the border.

As a result of the opening of the upstream sector as part of the landmark energy reform in 2014, private sector exploration and production (E&P) operators have entered the space in Mexico.

Mexico natural gas production in July was 3.855 Bcf/d, according to Comisión Nacional de Hidrocarburos (CNH), of which 227 MMcf/d, or about 6%, came from private E&Ps. Talanza is forecasting private sector production to hit 8% in 2021 and 20% of total gas production in 2027.

According to CNH data, 19 private sector E&Ps produced 196.2 MMcf/d in 2019, up 35.2% from the 127.1 MMcf/d averaged in 2018.

Working in the producers’ favor is that many industries, such as the petrochemical industry, and regions such as the Yucatán Peninsula or Baja California, are dealing with gas shortages, Flores said.

Thirsty Yucatán

The Yucatán Peninsula in particular has seen severe natural gas shortages recently putting its power supply at risk.

Earlier this year, the Mexican government announced a 10-mile interconnection between the Mayakan gas pipeline on the Yucatán and the Sistrangas national pipeline grid.

Mexico’s state-owned power company, Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE), and French multinational Engie SA are jointly developing the interconnecting pipeline, known as Cuxtal I, which is to have initial transport capacity of 240 MMcf/d.

As many of the privately operated fields were once Pemex’s, “they maintain — for now — the same agreements, ergo, they have contracts with Pemex E&P, Pemex Logistics, and Pemex Industrial Transformation,” Flores said. However, many firms are now analyzing other allocation possibilities.

These include Pemex processing plants, other non-Pemex processing plants, the Sistrangas, alternative transportation options, and compressed/liquefied natural gas.

Natural gas prices in Mexico, which are highly correlated to prices in the United States because of the Texas imports, are also seen rising.

In its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said Henry Hub spot prices should average $1.93/MMBtu in 2020 and $3.10 in 2021.

For the rest of the article: NGI

 


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