墨西哥国家石油公司深水天然气项目遭到墨西哥监管机构的谴责

墨西哥总统安德烈斯·曼努埃尔·洛佩兹·奥夫拉多尔一直试图支持国有企业,并让私人投资者保持观望,而墨西哥国家石油公司缺乏资金和巨额债务使这一议程变得复杂。

斯蒂芬妮·埃森巴赫、阿德里亚娜·巴雷拉和安娜·伊莎贝尔·马丁内斯,路透社

八位知情人士表示,墨西哥石油监管机构和国营公司 Pemex 在如何开发深水天然气项目上存在分歧,并威胁要叫停一项价值 15 亿美元的能源项目。

知情人士称,监管机构国家碳氢化合物委员会 (CNH) 的官员对墨西哥石油公司能否承担这一大型项目提出了质疑。

Lakach 油田储量高达 937 Bcf,但成本上升阻碍了开发。现在,墨西哥国家石油公司与美国液化天然气公司新堡垒能源公司重振开发的提议正受到争议。知情人士称,该项目的命运可能取决于上周辞职的 CNH 首席执行官罗赫利奥·埃尔南德斯 (Rogelio Hernandez) 的继任者。

墨西哥法律规定,监管部门的批准要求项目在技术和经济上均可行。CNH 和墨西哥国家石油公司之间围绕拉卡奇问题的对峙暴露了墨西哥自行开发储量的挑战。

总统安德烈斯·曼努埃尔·洛佩兹·奥夫拉多尔一直试图支持国有企业,并让私人投资者保持观望,而墨西哥国家石油公司缺乏资金和巨额债务使这一议程变得复杂。

Pemex 提议使用服务合同与 New Fortress Energy 共同开发拉卡奇,该方案是在 2013-14 年国家能源部门开放之前使用的。根据服务合同,墨西哥国家石油公司将保留全部所有权,但承担价格下跌的风险。

一位政府消息人士称,从历史上看,当价格高时,服务合同对墨西哥国家石油公司很有效。墨西哥国家石油公司的消息人士补充说,它们的执行速度比所有权共享的外包要快。

但专家表示,如果价格下跌且强制性费用超过石油和天然气生产的价值,它们可能会给墨西哥国家石油公司带来财务风险。

墨西哥国家石油公司和埃尔南德斯没有回应置评请求。CNH 拒绝置评。

CNH 辩称,只有墨西哥国家石油公司通过拍卖方式转包正式接纳合作伙伴,拉卡奇才有经济可行性。但洛佩兹·奥夫拉多尔排除了拍卖的可能性。阅读全文

伍德赛德能源公司 (Woodside Energy) 与墨西哥国家石油公司 (Pemex) 共同拥有 Trion 海上石油项目,该项目在洛佩兹·奥夫拉多尔 (Lopez Obrador) 上任之前获得批准,但该项目的最终投资决定已推迟到 2023 年中期,该项目是五年多前制定的。

稀缺选择

洛佩兹·奥夫拉多尔于 2018 年上任,自 2019 年以来,他的政府冻结了几轮公开竞标,这些竞标曾获得外国投资,以维持预计的石油和天然气产量增长。这迫使墨西哥国家石油公司诉诸服务合同来建立合作伙伴关系并引入发展资本。

7月,Pemex和New Fortress宣布为拉卡奇建立“长期战略合作伙伴关系”,将为国内使用天然气并生产用于出口的液化天然气。

两家公司没有详细说明如何分摊钻探、基础设施和开发成本。Pemex 已注入 7.68 亿美元用于勘探,墨西哥预计 New Fortress 将为该项目带来资金。

新堡垒能源表示,它将继续“按照条款进行工作”。

知情人士称,墨西哥国家石油公司已提议通过费用向 New Fortress 支付其捐款费用。

Lakach 是墨西哥湾的一个油田,有潜力供应高达 1.8 Bcf/d 的天然气,可能成为该国第一个商业深水天然气项目,并为这个 80% 以上燃料进口的国家提供巨大的推动力。

更高的风险

墨西哥国家石油公司原计划在洛佩兹·奥夫拉多尔的领导下签署至少30份服务合同,这些合同不需要像转包一样通过拍卖。但考虑到它们可能给一些合作伙伴带来的风险以及 CNH 不愿批准的情况,目前没有一家合作伙伴愿意这样做。

两名消息人士称,墨西哥国家石油公司起草的拉卡奇开发计划没有通过监管机构最新审查中的经济标准,并补充说钻探成本过高,产量被高估。

“增加投资和费用后,该项目将永远无法盈利,”监管机构的一位消息人士表示。“但如果该项目减少了墨西哥国家石油公司的损失,为什么不批准它呢?”

原文链接/hartenergy

Pemex Deepwater Gas Project Draws Rebuke from Mexico’s Regulator

Mexico’s president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, has sought to champion state companies and keep private investors on the sidelines, an agenda complicated by Pemex’s lack of capital and huge debts.

Stefanie Eschenbacher, Adriana Barrera and Ana Isabel Martinez, Reuters

Mexico’s oil regulator and state company Pemex are at odds over how to develop a deepwater natural gas project, eight people close to the matter said, threatening to stall a $1.5 billion energy venture.

Officials at regulator National Hydrocarbons Commission (CNH) have raised questions about whether Petroleos Mexicanos can shoulder the massive project, the people said.

The Lakach Field holds up to 937 Bcf of reserves but rising costs have hindered development. Now, a Pemex proposal to revive development with U.S. liquefied gas company New Fortress Energy is at issue. The project’s fate could depend on the replacement for CNH chief Rogelio Hernandez, who resigned last week, the people said.

Mexican laws stipulate regulatory approval requires projects be both technically and economically viable. The standoff between CNH and Pemex over Lakach lays bare the challenges of Mexico’s effort to self-develop its reserves.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has sought to champion state companies and keep private investors on the sidelines, an agenda complicated by Pemex’s lack of capital and huge debts.

Pemex has proposed to develop Lakach with New Fortress Energy using a service contract, a formula used prior to the nation's energy sector opening in 2013-14. Under a service contract, Pemex would retain full ownership but bear the risk if prices fall.

Historically, service contracts have worked for Pemex when prices are high, a government source said. And they are faster to execute than ownership-sharing farm-outs, Pemex source added.

But they could pose financial risks to Pemex if prices fall and mandatory fees surpass the value of oil and gas production, experts said.

Pemex and Hernandez did not respond to requests for comment. The CNH declined to comment.

The CNH has argued that Lakach would only be economically viable if Pemex were to formally take on a partner through a farm-out via auction. But Lopez Obrador has ruled out auctions.Read full story

Woodside Energy, joint owner with Pemex of the Trion offshore oil project, approved before Lopez Obrador took office, has pushed back until mid-2023 the final investment decision of the venture, created more than five years ago.

Scarce Options

Lopez Obrador took office in 2018, and since 2019 his government has frozen open-competition bidding rounds that had secured foreign investment for sustaining projected oil and gas output growth. This has forced Pemex to resort to service contracts to establish partnerships and bring in development capital.

In July, Pemex and New Fortress announced a “long-term strategic partnership” for Lakach that would supply gas for domestic use and produce LNG for exports.

The companies did not detail how they would split drilling, infrastructure and development costs. Pemex has already injected $768 million in exploration and Mexico expects New Fortress to bring capital for the project.

New Fortress Energy said that it continues “working on the terms.”

Pemex has proposed paying New Fortress through fees for its contributions, the people said.

Lakach, a Gulf of Mexico field with the potential to supply up to 1.8 Bcf/d of gas, could become the country’s first commercial deepwater gas project and provide a huge boost for a country importing over 80% of the fuel.

Higher Risks

Pemex had planned to sign at least 30 service contracts under Lopez Obrador, which do not need to pass through an auction like a farm-out. But given the risks they could imply for some partners and CNH’s reluctance to approve them, none have gone ahead.

The development plan for Lakach, drafted by Pemex, did not pass the economic criteria in the latest review by the regulator, two of the sources said, adding that drilling costs were too high and output was overestimated.

“After adding investment and expenses, the project will never be profitable,” said a source at the regulator. “But if that project reduces losses for Pemex, why not approve it?”