PEMEX receives more time to invest in projects

Aug. 31, 2017
Mexico’s energy ministry has approved a two-year deadline extension for PEMEX to invest in 101 oil and gas exploration blocks it was granted in 2014 under the government’s energy reform, according to a Reuters report.

Offshore staff

MEXICO CITYMexico’s energy ministry has approved a two-year deadline extension for PEMEX to invest in 101 oil and gas exploration blocks it was granted in 2014 under the government’s sweeping energy reform, according to a Reuters report.

The leases on the blocks were set to expire last weekend. According to the report, the ministry said in a statement that the new two-year leases took effect on Monday.

The energy reform, which ended PEMEX’s decades-long monopoly, allowed the national oil company to keep most of its previous leases on the condition that it perform a minimum level of work on the fields.

The reform’s fine print required all lease holders to invest in their projects within three years or risk losing them. The report added that PEMEX was unable to comply due to several rounds of budget cuts, and the global oil price slump dramatically reduced its cash flow.

PEMEX is seeking a joint venture partner for itsMaximino-Nobilis exploratory block in the Gulf of Mexico’s deepwaters, and has established a tie-up for its nearby Trion block with Australian mining and oil company BHP Billiton.

Three other exploratory leases face a legal challenge, and two more - one onshore and another in deepwater - were not granted the two-year extension, according to one of the sources cited in the report. The sources requested anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the matter.

The extensions give PEMEX more time to execute minimum investment plans for the projects, but failure to do so would force it to return the acreage to the state for possible inclusion in future oil auctions.

PEMEX was also given 286 extraction leases that are not affected by the investment requirement under the so-calledRound Zero tender in 2014.

Since then, Mexico has conductedseven international oil auctions of onshore and offshore acreage that formerly belonged to PEMEX.

The auctions have led to 70 new contracts that the energy ministry has estimated will bring $59 billion in new investment over the lifetime of the contracts, according to the report.

08/31/2017