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Oil in Mexico - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oil in Mexico

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A gas station in Puerto Vallarta
A gas station in Puerto Vallarta

Mexico is the sixth largest producer of oil in the world and the tenth largest in terms of net export as of 2007. It is the second largest oil producer in the Western Hemisphere behind only the United States and just ahead of Canada. However, Mexico is not a member of OPEC or any petroleum production related organizations.

The oil sector is crucial to the Mexican economy; while its importance has been reduced in recent years, oil revenues generate over 10% of Mexico's export earnings[1].

Contents

[edit] History

Explorers first drilled a petroleum well in Mexico in 1869 but oil was not discovered until after the turn of the twentieth century. By 1901, commercial production of crude oil in Mexico had begun. By 1910 prospectors had identified the Panuco-Ebano and Faja de Oro fields located near the central Gulf of Mexico coast town of Tuxpán. Systematic explorations by foreign companies (mainly American) came to supersede the uncoordinated efforts of speculative prospectors. Mexico became an oil exporting nation in 1911.

Legally, Article 27 of the constitution of 1917 granted the Mexican government the permanent and complete rights to all subsoil resources. This would cause conflicts between the Mexican government and foreign companies especially American oil companies until the matter was resolved in the 1930s. In 1925, President Plutarco Elías Calles decreed that foreign oil companies must register their titles and limited their concessions to fifty years.

During the 1920s, Mexico was second behind the United States in petroleum output and led the world in oil exports. However, as a consequence of worldwide economic depression, the lack of new oil discoveries, increased taxation, political instability, and Venezuela's emergence as a more attractive source of petroleum, output during the early 1930s had fallen to just 20% of its 1921 level.[2] Production began to recover with the 1932 discovery of the Poza Rica field near Veracruz, which would become Mexico's main source of petroleum for the next several decades.

[edit] Oil expropriation

Lázaro Cárdenas making the oil expropriation announcement on radio
Lázaro Cárdenas making the oil expropriation announcement on radio

In 1935, all companies in the business of oil production in Mexico were foreign companies. Labor practices in these companies poorly benefited the workers since the companies were able to block the creation of labor unions through legal and illegal tactics. Despite legal opposition, the Confederation of Mexican Workers was created and proposed a project of general contracts for each oil company. A strike was planned to push towards an agreement but the matter went to the court instead. On December 18, the Arbitration Board declared in favor of the union and ordered the oil companies had to pay 26 million pesos in lost wages because of the strike.

Mexican President Lázaro Cárdenas intervened in the legal preceding by expropriating the oil industry and nationalized the petroleum industry, giving the Mexican government a monopoly in the exploration, production, refining, and distribution of oil and natural gas, and in the manufacture and sale of basic petrochemicals. Between 1938 and 1971, Mexico's oil output expanded at an average annual rate of 6%.[3] In 1957, Mexico became a petroleum net importer after domestic demands exceeded domestic production. However, production rose to 177 million barrels (28.1×106 m3) by 1971 with the exploitation of new oil fields in the isthmus of Tehuantepec and natural gas reserves near the northeastern border city of Reynosa, but the gap between domestic demand and production continued to widen.

[edit] Post-nationalization

1973 witnessed Mexican oil production surpassing the peak of 190 million barrels (30×106 m3) achieved in the early 1920s. In 1974 PEMEX announced petroleum discoveries in Veracruz, Baja California Norte, Chiapas, and Tabasco. In 1976, President López Portillo announced that Mexico's proven hydrocarbon reserves had risen up to 11 billion barrels (1.7×109 m3). By 1983, that figure further rose to 72.5 billion barrels (11.53×109 m3). Portillo then decided to increase Mexican petroleum production and use the value of the reserves as collateral for acquiring large international loans, most of which went to PEMEX. From 1977 to 1980, PEMEX received $12.6 billion in international credit, representing 37% of Mexico's total foreign debt but nevertheless used the money to construct and operate offshore drilling platforms. PEMEX further expanded by building onshore processing facilities, enlarging its refineries, and vastly improving its production capabilities. These investments led to an increase in petroleum output from 400 million barrels (64×106 m3) in 1977 to 1.1 billion barrels (170×106 m3) by 1982. By 2007, Mexico had a net oil export of 1.756 million barrels per day (279.2×103 m3/d).[4]

[edit] Oil production

Mexico produces three grades of crude oil: heavy Maya-22 (accounting for more than half of the total production); light, low-sulfur Isthmus-34 (28% of production); and extra-light Olmeca-39 (20% of production). Mexico has the second largest proven oil reserves in the Western Hemisphere with 30.8 billion barrels (4.90×109 m3) at the beginning of 2002, down from 32.6 billion barrels (5.18×109 m3) one year earlier. Mexico stands ninth in the worldwide ranking of proven oil reserves with only Venezuela higher in the Western Hemisphere.

Mexico's Major Southern offshore oil fields
Mexico's Major Southern offshore oil fields

PEMEX is Mexico's state-owned petroleum company and the sole supplier of all commercial gasoline (petrol/diesel) stations in the country. Cantarell Field is the largest oil field in Mexico and one of the largest in the world producing. As of 2007, Mexico has approximately 12.4 billion barrels (1.97×109 m3) in proven oil reserves. In November 2006, Pemex reported that Cantarell has produced 11.492 billion barrels (1.8271×109 m3) of oil.[5] Several oil fields have also been discovered in the Chicontepec Basin. The Chicontepec fields contains Mexico's largest, certified hydrocarbon reserve, totaling more than 19 barrels of oil equivalent (120 GJ) with original oil in place of over 139 barrels of oil equivalent (850 GJ); recovery is complicated by challenging, low recovery rate reservoirs, but is made more attractive due to the presence of light and super-light oil.[6]

In 2002, the Ku-Maloob-Zaap oil field was discovered offshore in the Bay of Campeche, 105 kilometers from Ciudad del Carmen. PEMEX plans to drill 82 fields and install 17 oil platforms, as well as build an oil pipeline of 166 kilometers to transport the oil produced. By 2011, production is expected to reach 800 thousand barrels per day (130×103 m3/d) and 282 million cubic feet (8.0×106 m3) of natural gas.

In an interview on the oil news website, oilcast.com, in November 2005, a anonymous PEMEX employee revealed the company's inability to increase production, stating that the country is at Hubbert's Peak.[7] The individual interviewed believed export levels could not be recovered once peak had passed, as the size of current fields that have been discovered or are coming online represent a fraction of the size of the oil fields going into terminal decline.

Offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico
Offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico

Annual production has dropped or failed to increase each year since 2004.[8] Furthermore, it has been reported the 2005-2006 daily oil production was down by approximately 500 thousand barrels per day (79×103 m3/d) on the previous year. Nevertheless, Mexico still produced approximately 3.42 million barrels (544×103 m3) of oil per day ranking it sixth in the world in terms of total production.[9]

Year Oil Production Rank Percentile Change
million barrels per day thousand cubic meters per day
2003 3.59 571 5 N/A
2004 3.59 571 5 0.00%
2005 3.46 550 5 -3.62%
2006 3.42 544 6 -1.16%
2007 3.42 544 6 0.00%

[edit] Notes and references

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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