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Foreign firms compete in historic Mexico oil auction

AFP/Mexico City


US, European and Asian energy firms will tomorrow compete in Mexico’s first oil auction since a historic reform brought back private investors, nearly 80 years after they were kicked out.
The government is offering 14 blocks in shallow waters of the Gulf of Mexico worth an estimated $17bn in total, in a contest that includes seven consortiums and 18 individual companies.
Foreign and new Mexican companies have been preparing for months for this moment, the climax of President Enrique Pena Nieto’s marquee reform, which was enacted last year following a heated debate in Congress over sharing a source of national pride.
The legislation breaks the monopoly on drilling held by state-run firm Pemex since the industry’s 1938 nationalisation.
Pena Nieto hopes that the arrival of foreign investment will reverse years of declining production and give a boost to the economy.
US giants ExxonMobil and Chevron, Anglo-Australian firm BHP Billion, India’s state-run ONGC Videsh, Russia’s Lukoil, France’s Total and Chinese-owned Nexen are among the firms bidding on an individual basis.
While Pemex is in the mix, officials said the Mexican firm will sit out this time and likely bid in another auction in the future.
Some of the consortiums include Italy’s ENI, Thailand’s Petronas Carigali and other firms, including from Mexico.
While 14 locations off the southeastern coast are up for grabs, Energy Minister Pedro Joaquin Coldwell played down expectations that all would be auctioned off. Coldwell said that, based on international examples, between 30% and half of the blocks will have winning bids.
“It seems realistic to me,” David Enriquez, an energy expert at Mexico City’s Goodrich, Riquelme y Asociados law firm, said. “It’s natural that not all fields are awarded in one round.”
Of the blocks up for bid, four have drawn medium to high interest, while four others have average demand and the rest are less attractive, he said.
The sharp drop in global oil prices are also playing a part in investor sentiment. For the auction to be deemed “sufficiently” successful, Mexico would have to award at least the four most attractive blocks, Enriquez said.
“It’s important because it will be the first test” of the energy reform and a way for companies to get a feel for Mexico’s oil auction system, he said. “It will be like training.”
But David Shields, an industry analyst and director of the magazine Energia a Debate, said the government was being “totally pessimistic.”
“It would be very strange to me if they didn’t award almost all the blocks,” Shields said.
“There’s always the risk that many of the blocks will be concentrated in the hands of one company. One or two companies could dominate,” he said.
Coldwell said bigger oil firms may sit out the first round and save themselves for the bigger, more complicated projects such as deep-water and inland shale gas drilling.
“We think that the first round must be evaluated once everything has been developed,” he told reporters last week.
Oil auctions are a new thing for Mexico and officials said they wanted to make them transparent.
Tomorrow’s auction will be shown live on a web and satellite broadcast, said National Hydrocarbon Commission president Juan Carlos Zepeda.



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