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Mexico’s Oil: Who needs it?. José Alberro July 2007. Outline. Declining reserves, declining production PEMEX’s shortcomings Inauspicious political environments Designing alternatives. Axes. Leading supplier of oil to the US Are Mexico's reserves on the decline?
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Mexico’s Oil:Who needs it? José Alberro July 2007
Outline. • Declining reserves, declining production • PEMEX’s shortcomings • Inauspicious political environments • Designing alternatives
Axes • Leading supplier of oil to the US • Are Mexico's reserves on the decline? • Why/how do countries grow? Is oil a strategic resource to address development needs? • In Mexico the debate has centered on: • privatization vs sovereignty • PEMEX modernization vs government revenues • Venezuela or Brazil • Solutions “in times of colera”, not remembrances.
Is PEMEX’s exploration strategy paying off? • Proved (P90) reserves halved between 1995 and 2006. BUT • Possible (P10) reserves have grown at 7% since 2001. • Total: rate went from -1.6% (1995-1999) to -3.5% (1999-2006).
A decade of PEMEX performance: Falling oil production; stagnant refinery runs and 40% decrease in petrochemical production.
Oil revenues and development needs • Economic Growth is NOT about factor accumulation. • It is NOT about more roads; more education; more… • It IS about Total Factor Productivity (TFP). • Biggest obstacles to TFP growth are: • Government overregulation • Inflexible labor laws • Weak rule of Law • Monopoly pricing in electricity, natural gas, liquid hydrocarbons, telecommunications? • Is Mexico ceasing to be perceived as asset rich? • How much will this impair its growth performance?.
Three Scenarios • Some believe that what stands between the current situation and Scenario II is the unreasonable tax burden on PEMEX. • Some believe Scenario I is likely and that it will lead to Scenario III. • Mexico’s fears have been close to the political surface for a century: El Niño Dios te escrituró un establo y los veneros del petróleo el diablo. ….. Patria: un mutilado territorio se viste de percal y de abalorio Ramón Lopez Velarde, Suave Patria (1920)
Political Environment: interlocking questions • Mexico: Is the time ripe for a new political compact that will entail changes? If not, little will change in the oil sector. • USA: Will the US face up to geopolitical events in Latin America? Little good will capital to be leveraged to foster liberalization. • The Latin American Example: how will the confrontation between oil-rich populism and a market oriented economy resolve itself? AMLO. • Governments may not be the ideal agents of change in the current environment. • Private investors may consider doing so.
An example: the Gulf of Mexico Doughnut Hole. • The Western Gap was apportioned between the US and Mexico in 2000. • 10 year moratorium on production. • The US has leased significant portions of the Western Gap, north of the buffer zone • Chevron (2006), among others, made discoveries under more than 7000 feet of water. • Estimates range from 3-20 billion barrels of oil and from 6-45 trillion cubic feet of gas. • Significant Transboundary issues. • The Mexican Legal Framework is inadequate to deal with “unitization”. • A private arrangement?
Oil Investment in the risky Gulf of Mexico. • Venezuela’s and Bolivia’s dealings with oil companies. • Neo Ricardian rents, operational control and sovereign claims. • Will Shell or Chevron invest in the doughnut with Transboundary risk? • Can Shell and Chevron afford to wait for the US government?
The NAFTA Chapter 6 precedent: opportunities for change? Article 601: Principles 1. The Parties confirm their full respect for their Constitutions. 2. The Parties recognize that it is desirable to strengthen the important role that trade in energy and basic petrochemical goods plays in the free trade area and to enhance this role through sustained and gradual liberalization. 3. The Parties recognize the importance of having viable and internationally competitive energy and petrochemical sectors to further their individual national interests. Annex 602.3 Each Party shall allow its state enterprises to negotiate performance clauses in their service contracts.
Wait for Diplomacy ? The Doughnut Hole • The head of PEMEX Exploration and Producción (PEP) is aware of the issue. • Can oil companies craft a “service contract with performance clauses” to their liking instead of lobbying to change the Mexican Constitution?
THANKS José Alberro