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To: JimisJim who wrote (184001)5/21/2014 7:45:42 PM
From: isopatch  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 206184
 
Personally? Don't have a strong opinion either way. No question Mexico has badly mismanaged the resource. OTOH, hard not to notice strong stances being taken on either side of what we can expect in the future.

For example, per the article below, Citigroup (whose research Dennis often references) has said Mexican oil output may double! Think it's reasonable to point out that a gain even HALF that large would have significant market impact.

Have you seen any indication they've changed their view, Dennis? TIA

The balance of the article lines up other serious analyst opinion on the yea side.

Iso

<North America to Drown in Oil as Mexico Ends Monopoly

By Joe Carroll and Bradley Olson December 16, 2013



The Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) La Muralla IV deep sea crude oil platform in the waters off Veracruz, Mexico, on Aug. 30, 2013. Photographer: Susana Gonzalez/Bloomberg

The flood of North American crude oil is set to become a deluge as Mexico dismantles a 75-year-old barrier to foreign investment in its oil fields.

Plagued by almost a decade of slumping output that has degraded Mexico’s take from a $100-a-barrel oil market, President Enrique Pena Nieto is seeking an end to the state monopoly over one of the biggest crude resources in the Western Hemisphere. The doubling in Mexican oil output that Citigroup Inc. said may result from inviting international explorers to drill would be equivalent to adding another Nigeria to world supply, or about 2.5 million barrels a day.

That boom would augment a supply surge from U.S. and Canadian wells that Exxon Mobil Corp. ( XOM:US) predicts will vault North American production ahead of every OPEC member except Saudi Arabia within two years. With U.S. refineries already choking on more oil than they can process, producers from Exxon to ConocoPhillips are clamoring for repeal of the export restrictions that have outlawed most overseas sales of American crude for four decades.

“This is going to be a huge opportunity for any kind of player” in the energy sector, said Pablo Medina, a Latin American upstream analyst at Wood Mackenzie Ltd. in Houston. “All the companies are going to have to turn their heads and start analyzing Mexico.”

Unprecedented Output An influx of Mexican oil would contribute to a glut that is expected to lower the price of Brent crude, the benchmark for more than half the world’s crude that has averaged $108.62 a barrel this year, to as low as $88 a barrel in 2017, based on estimates from analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Five of the seven analysts who provided 2017 forecasts said prices would be lower than this year.

The revolution in shale drilling that boosted U.S. oil output to a 25-year high this month will allow North America to join the ranks of the world’s crude-exporting continents by 2040, Exxon said in its annual global energy forecast on Dec. 12. Europe and the Asia-Pacific region will be the sole crude import markets by that date, the Irving, Texas-based energy producer said.

Exxon’s forecast, compiled annually by a team of company economists, scientists and engineers, didn’t take into account any changes in Mexico, William Colton, the company’s vice president of strategic planning, said during a presentation at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington on Dec. 12.

Opening Mexico’s oilfields to foreign investment would be “a win-win if ever there was one,” said Colton, who described the move as “very good for the people of Mexico and people everywhere in the world who use energy.”

$15 Billion Boost The bill ending the state monopoly was approved by the Mexican Congress Dec. 12. Before becoming law, the proposal must be ratified by state assemblies, most of which are controlled by proponents of the reform. Oil companies will be offered production-sharing contracts, or licenses where they get ownership of the pumped oil and authority to book crude reserves for accounting purposes. The contracts will be overseen by government regulators.

Though some foreign companies already operate in Mexico under service contracts with Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, the reform could increase foreign investment by as much as $15 billion annually and boost potential economic growth by half a percentage point, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a Nov. 28 report.

Potential Delays A doubling in production as suggested by Citigroup’s Ed Morse would put Mexican output at 5 million barrels a day, an unprecedented level for Pemex, the state oil company created during nationalization in 1938.

U.S. crude production will expand to 9.5 million barrels a day in 2016, the highest since the nation’s peak in 1970, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said today. That contrasts with last year’s EIA forecast that production would reach 7.5 million in 2019 before gradually declining to 6.1 million in 2040. U.S. output reached an all-time high 9.6 million in 1970.

A doubling of Mexico’s output maybe be slower to realize than the most bullish predictions as companies confront barriers in accessing capital and human resources needed for development, Riccardo Bertocco, a partner at Bain & Co. in Dallas.

An increase of 1 million barrels a day in output is the most realistic upper limit of what Mexico could achieve by 2025 based on the cost for new infrastructure, competition for new fields and opportunities all over the U.S., Bertocco said in a telephone interview Dec. 12.

“The opportunities are there, but they are still far from being materialized,” he said.

Regulator Inexperience Drilling in Mexico will be held back by a lack of infrastructure, such as pipelines, in some of the potential shale developments. The government will need to decide on details for development such as tax rates, royalty structures and standards for booking reserves, Kurt Hallead, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, wrote in a Dec. 12 note to clients.

It will take time to organize and conduct bidding rounds for licenses, and additional exploration, such as seismic tests, will need to be done, Hallead said.

“We are not expecting any significant impact from the reform to be felt in the next two years,” he wrote.

Foreign oil companies will face a backlash from Mexicans opposed to sharing the nation’s oil wealth, said Ricardo Monreal Avila of Movimiento Ciudadano Party, who sees the reform as violating Mexico’s constitution.

Local Opposition “We are going to see serious problems in the operations of these reforms. Indigenous communities and places chosen by foreign companies for extraction will not allow them on their property. There are going to be serious operational problems.”

Brent crude futures, the benchmark for more than half the world’s oil, rose as much as 1.8 percent to $110.80 a barrel in London today, the biggest intraday gain in two weeks, after Libyan rebels refused to relinquish control over oil ports to the central government. Libya, home to Africa’s largest proven reserves, has seen output tumble to the lowest since 2011 amid civil strife.

The first assets that will attract foreign investment will be mature oil fields drilled decades ago and reservoirs that need injections of steam or carbon dioxide to coax more crude out of the ground, Medina said. Deep-water prospects, shale and other technically challenging endeavors will follow later, he said.

The level of investor interest will be partly determined by which assets Pemex chooses to keep and which it will put up for auction, Medina said.

Chicontepec Price The Chicontepec field northeast of Mexico City may be among the richest prizes Pemex surrenders after its problems overcoming low pressure and disconnected crude deposits that have limited output, Medina said. Production that has averaged about 60,000 barrels a day may be increased to more than 100,000 by an international producer experienced in handling such fields, he said.

Chicontepec is just one of the over-budget, long-delayed projects for which Pemex will be eager to find partners, said Jose Antonio Prado, a former general counsel of Mexico’s energy ministry and Pemex official.

“The Mexican state will be able to incorporate private participants in projects that are already in force as well as new opportunities,” said Prado, now a partner at the law firm Holland & Knight LLP in Mexico City.

Deep Water The reforms are especially important to open up exploration in Mexico’s deep-water fields, where additional capital, as well as better technology and expertise are needed, Carlos Solé, a Houston-based partner at Baker Botts LLP, said in a telephone interview. Pemex estimated the country’s deep-water Gulf of Mexico prospects may hold the equivalent of 26.6 billion barrels of crude.

Onshore, the potential is even greater with more than 60 billion untapped barrels, according to a Pemex presentation last month.

Some of the potential shale production sits across the border from Texas’s prolific Eagle Ford formation. The most resource-rich area studied so far is around the city of Tampico, a coastal city about 300 miles (480 kilometers) south of the bottom tip of the Texas border.

“I can’t tell you the amount of banks and investment funds coming from the U.S. and Europe that have been talking to us and are trying to have an expectation of what’s going to happen with the energy reform,” Prado said. “All those guys are going to be in Mexico next year in various forms trying to seek new opportunities.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Joe Carroll in Chicago at jcarroll8@bloomberg.net; Bradley Olson in Houston at bradleyolson@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Susan Warren at susanwarren@bloomberg.net

businessweek.com



To: JimisJim who wrote (184001)5/21/2014 8:31:01 PM
From: isopatch  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 206184
 
From last week. The reporters and editors are different, and the article shows more balance and depth with more moderate expectations for production increases.

Going to be fun to watch this play out, with the added caveat that I may not live long enough...))

Iso

<Mexico Oil Opening May Release Gusher for Foreigners

By Adam Williams May 13, 2014




A Pemex pipeline in the Bay of Campeche. The state-owned company will need help developing deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. Photographer: Susana Gonzalez/Bloomberg

When Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto arrived at the March 18 rally, he was greeted like a rock star. Hundreds of local residents and employees of Petroleos Mexicanos had gathered in the eastern state of Veracruz for the annual celebration of the 1938 expropriation of foreign oil wells and the founding of Pemex. The workers, all dressed in white shirts and guayaberas bearing the Pemex logo, leaned over waist-high barriers to try to touch the photogenic president. They cheered and sang, breaking frequently into a chant normally reserved for the national soccer team, Bloomberg Markets will report in its June issue.

An outsider would never have guessed that, just three months earlier, Pena Nieto, 47, had signed into law a constitutional amendment that Pemex, its powerful union and its political backers had fought against for decades. The amendment opens up Mexican oil and gas fields to foreign and private investment for the first time in 76 years.

After signing the constitutional change into law on Dec. 20, Pena Nieto told his countrymen that it would be a boon. “We’ve decided to overcome the myths and taboos to take a great leap into the future,” he said. “A new history begins for our country.”

Yet at the March rally, he amplified the cheers by assuring the Pemex workers that none of their 153,000 colleagues would lose their jobs.

Petrostate Pemex has always functioned as an arm of the state. It’s the biggest Mexican company and the country’s biggest taxpayer. In the final quarter of 2013, Pemex paid 50 percent of its revenue -- $16 billion -- in taxes to the federal government, which uses the state-owned company to fund a third of its budget.

Pemex posted a loss of $5.8 billion for the quarter, bringing its total loss for 2013 to $13 billion. The loss for the first quarter of 2014 was $2.74 billion.

Congress approved a broad tax overhaul last year designed to increase collection of personal income and consumption taxes to begin to wean the government off Pemex revenues. Yet Pemex Chief Financial Officer Mario Beauregard says company taxes will not be cut this year. And it will likely be years before enough new tax revenue from foreign oil drilling comes in to replace the lost tax levies from Pemex.

Edgar Rangel, commissioner of Mexico’s National Hydrocarbons Commission, which oversees and regulates oil exploration, predicts that the opening of the country’s energy industry will bring in up to $30 billion of foreign investment annually and create as many as 2 million jobs.

Moody’s Upgrade The law’s approval prompted Moody’s Investors Service in February to raise Mexico’s credit rating one level to A3 from Baa1, saying it will help add about 1 percentage point to the country’s annual gross domestic product growth by 2018.

For Pemex, the constitutional change will mean it gets much-needed help in increasing its oil production, which has declined for nine consecutive years and, as of the end of March, reached its lowest monthly level since 1995.

For foreign oil giants such as Chevron Corp. ( CVX:US), Exxon Mobil Corp. ( XOM:US) and Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA), it means they’ll get access to untapped oil reserves that Pemex says could total 113 billion barrels, including 26.6 billion in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico. At current prices, the reserves are worth $11 trillion. The government says foreign investment together with the revamping of Pemex’s aging infrastructure will drive up production to 4 million barrels a day by 2025 from 2.47 million at the end of March.

‘Shale Frenzy’ Pemex Chief Executive Officer Emilio Lozoya says Mexico also boasts 13 trillion cubic meters (460 trillion cubic feet) of unexploited shale gas in the rock formations beneath its soil, worth an estimated $2.2 trillion. Kent Moors, executive chair of research firm Global Energy Symposium, says five major fields identified so far could produce a “shale frenzy” among private companies.

The foreign incursion into the oil and gas fields will begin later this year, after the Mexican Congress passes secondary legislation, introduced in early May. The measure calls for foreign drillers to use Mexican suppliers for 25 percent of equipment and services by 2025. It proposes that the tax Pemex pays to the government be reduced over 10 years. The bill also relieves the Finance Ministry of its duty to approve the company’s budget. The sale of gasoline, now a Pemex monopoly, would gradually open to competition.

‘All the Cake’ Lourdes Melgar, Mexico’s deputy energy minister, says Pemex likely lacks the financial and technical resources to operate all of its existing fields efficiently, much less expand into new ones. Nevertheless, the company has told the government it wants to maintain control of most of its current operations, with any private companies joining it as junior partners.

“Pemex wants to eat all the cake, but it can’t,” Melgar said at a press conference in March. “I think there will be gray areas where we will have to ask Pemex for more information and, at some point, tell them, ‘This one won’t work or you can’t have these two things.’”

Mexico’s near-term goal is to raise production 20 percent, to more than 3 million barrels a day, by 2018. Delays in passage of the implementing legislation and the awarding of contracts makes that unlikely, says Maria Jose Hernandez, a Washington-based associate at global risk consulting firm Eurasia Group.

“Initial increases in oil production volumes could be seen in 2016, but at very small levels,” Hernandez says.

Government Decouple Pena Nieto’s plan is for Pemex to cease to be, in effect, a government department and function like a for-profit company. To further that goal, the government plans to allocate $28 billion to Pemex for oil exploration and production in 2014.

As part of the overhaul, the National Union of Mexican Oil Workers will relinquish its five seats on the Pemex board. The board will be trimmed to 10 members from 15 and will include five government officials selected by the president and five independent members, according to Pemex board member Fluvio Ruiz.

The models for a new Pemex, CEO Lozoya says, are Petroleo Brasileiro SA (PETR4), the Brazilian oil major that opened to foreign competition in 1997; Norway’s Statoil ASA (STL); and Colombia’s Ecopetrol SA (ECOPETL), which has seen production almost double since state control was limited in 2003.

“When you are the last one to the party, you can learn from other people’s mistakes,” says Juan Carlos Gay, a partner at Bain & Co. in London who has studied Mexico’s oil industry. “One thing that Pemex and the Mexican government should leverage is the way to use joint ventures in a smart way, which includes bringing in and developing the expertise and capabilities of other companies.”

1938 Seizure Pemex was born in a surge of nationalist sentiment during the presidency of Lazaro Cardenas (1934 to 1940). On March 18, 1938, Cardenas nationalized the country’s oil fields and seized the assets of Royal Dutch Shell and Standard Oil Co., at the time major suppliers of oil to the U.S. The government monopoly on petroleum production was later enshrined in the constitution.

The Pena Nieto government’s proposal to repeal that provision sent thousands of protesters into the streets of Mexico City last year. The legislation passed only after promises by the government and company executives that Pemex workers wouldn’t lose their jobs and that the move would boost Mexico’s slowing economy, which expanded 1.1 percent in 2013, far below forecasts.

The rapid fall in Pemex oil production helped drive the decision. Mexico became a major oil exporter after the 1971 discovery of one of the world’s biggest oil fields in the shallow waters of the Bay of Campeche. The field was named Cantarell after fisherman Rudesindo Cantarell, who alerted Pemex when he saw oil in the water.

Falling Production Cantarell’s output has fallen almost 90 percent since it began production in 1979. That would have been a catastrophe for the government had the price of oil not increased to more than $100 a barrel during the past decade.

The failure of Pemex and its government overseers to invest in the latest drilling and exploration technology is partly to blame for the decline. Pemex could have earned an average of 48 percent in additional revenue each year from 2001 to 2009 if it operated more efficiently, according to a 2011 study of Mexico’s oil industry by the University of Oxford and the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University in Houston.

A critical issue for the future of Pemex is manpower. The company is overstaffed with unskilled workers whose jobs are guaranteed for life and understaffed with engineers and other skilled laborers, says Marcelo Mereles, a former Pemex director who’s now a partner at EnergeA, an energy consulting firm in Mexico City.

‘Cultural Handicap’ “Pemex continues to have a very big cultural handicap,” Mereles says. “The government has converted Pemex into a very bureaucratic company that operates like a government office and not like an international oil company.”

Pemex’s ability to compete with foreign companies will also be hampered by deficiencies in Mexico’s educational system.

“We’ve all heard the excellent news about Mexico’s great potential in the energy sector, but the question is, who’s going to do it?” Rangel of the hydrocarbons commission said in a March 12 speech. “We have very few universities committed to oil production, petrochemicals, chemical engineering or physics. And we produce very few engineers. Many of the engineers we produce in those fields work anywhere else but Mexico.”

Raising Pay That’s because until now a petroleum engineer’s main potential employer in Mexico was Pemex, and he could earn more money abroad. The legislation implementing the constitutional change will give Pemex “the capacity to compensate our workers with industry salaries,” Lozoya says.

Whoever does the drilling, one area of greatest potential for Mexico is its shale deposits. Victor Herrera, managing director for Latin America at Standard & Poor’s, says that the petroleum embedded in shale is the “low-hanging fruit” of Mexico’s energy overhaul, and new exploration could come as soon as the second half of this year.

“We could see a lot of investment coming very quickly from Texas,” Herrera says.

That’s because one so-far underexplored shale formation lies in northern Mexico across the border from Texas’s prolific Eagle Ford field. Oil output at Eagle Ford rose to 1.2 million barrels a day last year from about 50,000 in 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Fracturing Shale The Mexican portion of the underground formation holds an estimated 3 billion barrels of oil and 4.2 trillion cubic meters of natural gas, according to Pemex. Company officials say it will need outside help to exploit any gas finds.

Another area where Mexico needs outside expertise is deep-water drilling. Pemex has only four deepwater platforms in the gulf, compared with 53 on the U.S. side, according to Houston-based oil services company Baker Hughes Inc. ( BHI:US) Foreign companies will partner with Pemex and will likely be permitted to drill independently in Mexico’s deep waters, Lozoya says.

“The energy reform is the most important economic change in Mexico in the last 50 years,” President Pena Nieto told the Pemex employees on March 18.

The question is how quickly Pemex itself can benefit from it.

To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Williams in Mexico City at awilliams111@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael Serrill at mserrill@bloomberg.net James Attwood>

businessweek.com