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Mexico signs energy reform bills: now to wait for interested private companies

Tuesday, August 12th 2014 - 06:05 UTC
Full article 15 comments
“This represents a historic change that will accelerate the economic growth and development of Mexico in the coming years,” said Peña Nieto “This represents a historic change that will accelerate the economic growth and development of Mexico in the coming years,” said Peña Nieto
Next Wednesday the “Round Zero” rights allocation to determine which oil and gas fields Pemex keeps and which will be up for international bidding. Next Wednesday the “Round Zero” rights allocation to determine which oil and gas fields Pemex keeps and which will be up for international bidding.

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto signed on Monday a package of landmark energy reform bills, ending the 76-year-old state monopoly on oil drilling and reopening the sector to foreign companies.

 “This represents a historic change that will accelerate the economic growth and development of Mexico in the coming years,” the president told hundreds of guests at a ceremony in the capital.

The signing comes five days after the Mexican Senate gave final approval to the laws, the president's most ambitious political project and the centerpiece of his efforts to kick-start Latin America's second-largest economy.

Peña Nieto argues the nine new laws and 12 amendments will fuel growth, create jobs and modernize state energy firm Pemex, whose oil production has fallen from 3.4 million barrels per day in 2004 to 2.5 million today.

But the leftist opposition accuses the president of gutting Pemex, the country's main source of tax revenue, and betraying the legacy of the 1938 nationalization of the oil industry.

The president rejected that criticism Monday, saying the reforms “preserve and assure our national property.”

Having won the legislative battle, Peña Nieto's administration must now write new regulations for the energy sector, a project the president said would be finished in October.

He also said officials would announce on Wednesday the results of the so-called “Round Zero” rights allocation that will determine which oil and gas fields Pemex keeps and which will be up for international bidding.

“That will allow potential national and foreign investors to begin preparing now to take part in the first round of bidding, whose guidelines will be published in the first quarter of next year,” said Peña Nieto.

Foreign energy firms including ExxonMobil and BP have been keenly watching the reforms, hiring lawyers and consulting tax experts in anticipation of a return to Mexico -- though analysts say there is also wariness over high taxes, corruption and drug violence in the oil- and gas-rich north of the country.

Top Comments

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  • Troy Tempest

    Seeing more and more articles on MP about Mexico and Brazil - feet and fewer about Argentina, except to say they have run out of options, CFK cannot stall any longer, and economic collapse is inevitable, now.

    Aug 12th, 2014 - 06:57 am 0
  • JoseAngeldeMonterrey

    The Burgos Shale basin on the border with Texas it´s huge and already attracting many interested Shale operators from the US. It expands into three Mexican states: Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon and Coahuila. Burgos will be based to thousands of operations, it´s already triggering interests from heavy-energy demanding industries like the metallurgy industry, manufacturing and other.

    Aug 12th, 2014 - 07:04 am 0
  • Alistair Nigel (EUian)

    @1

    Well it's simple: Argentina has rejected capitalism, forever.

    Argentina has rejected Europeans, forever.

    Argentina has rejected North Americans, forever

    Since those are the three pillars of Mercopress's ideology, that pisses them off that Argentina refuses to do what the rest of the world does.

    And the capitalists and the EU and USA are so vane they are outraged Argentina would dare just go its own way. It shows how irrelevant you really are, that Argentina decided you have nothing to offer.

    Aug 12th, 2014 - 01:27 pm 0
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