Output Falling in Oil-Rich Mexico, and Politics Gets the Blame
By ELISABETH MALKIN
Published: March 9, 2007
MEXICO CITY, March 8 — The KU-S oil production platform off the coast of Ciudad del Carmen, with its 10,000-ton tangle of yellow and red tanks and pipes, would seem the natural product of three years of soaring energy prices. The newly installed platform certainly is the face that Mexico’s state oil monopoly, Pemex, would like to show off.
But Pemex is in trouble. Its production and proven reserves are falling, and it has no money to reverse the slide. Mexico is the second-largest supplier of imported oil to the United States, after Canada, but its total exports are slipping. If the company continues on its current course, Mexico may one day have trouble just keeping up with rising demand at home.
The evidence of its predicament is clear not far from the KU-S platform. On the horizon, some 50 to 60 miles into the southern Gulf of Mexico, aging rigs billow flames and black smoke over the waters as they burn off the natural gas they are unable to process.
The major reason that Pemex’s prospects are so poor, energy experts agree, is government interference. The Mexican government, which expropriated the oil industry in 1938, depends on Pemex to finance its budget. Last year, sales at Pemex (its full name is Petróleos Mexicanos) reached $97 billion. But $79 billion of that went to the government, Pemex’s chief, Jesús Reyes Heróles, said last month. That accounted for almost 40 percent of the federal budget.
more:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/09/business/worldbusiness/09pemex.htmlNote: this is basically an anti-worker article. Supposedly there are "billions of barrels of oil" but they can't extract them because of the terrible, awful Mexican Unions and state run Bueaucracy...
I am sure if only EXXXON/Mobil could run things everything would be so much better :sarcasm: