Mexican election could tip balance for energy policy

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil, Metals, Oil products
  • 02/06/21

Victory for the ruling party in Mexico's midterm elections this month could further erode the country's draw for international investment after recent energy reforms have led to a wave of lawsuits and complaints.

On 6 June, Mexicans will elect all 500 members of the lower house of congress, 15 of 32 state gubernatorial seats, and thousands of local lawmakers. President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's Morena party is trying to increase its current simple majority in the lower house to a two-thirds majority, which would allow it to modify the constitution — including the 2014 energy reform.

Recent reforms by the ruling party have already hurt business confidence. Companies in industries from energy to food to automotive are taking both domestic and international legal action.

"Certainly, the administration's rollback of some of the energy reforms made under the prior administration should raise some concerns with investors, not only in the US but throughout the world," said Jon Barela, chief executive of the Borderplex Alliance, an economic development group in the El Paso-Ciudad Juarez region.

Unsteady outlook

But Morena's chance of a sweep is less solid than it once looked.

Morena is likely to lose its legislative majority amid growing social discontent and the president's declining popularity, political risk company Control Risks said last month.

The party has faced harsh criticism for its handling of the May collapse of a section of an elevated metro line in Mexico City — built during the city administration of Lopez Obrador allies — that killed at least 23 people.

Morena could lose its simple majority and win only 227 seats in the 500-seat lower house — down from the 256 it holds — while opposition parties PAN and PRI could increase their numbers to 81 from 77 and 61 from 48, respectively, according to pollster Oraculus.

But others disagree. The decline in Covid-19 cases and gradual reopening of the economy will work in Morena's favor, countered JPMorgan's Mexico economist Gabriel Lozano, and likely allow the president's party to at least retain the simple majority in the lower house.

"We believe Morena/[Lopez Obrador] will consolidate its power, and will continue to move forward with a populist agenda," Lozano said.

At the state level, Morena is expected to win between six and nine governorships — up from the six it currently holds — while the PRI party that oversaw the 2014 energy reform is forecast to lose seven.

But final results could vary between 10-47pc given a high number of undecided voters in many states, polling companies said.

Fuel for the fire

Election results could help determine the fate of recent changes to the refined products markets that courts have deemed unconstitutional. The government will decide whether to fight challenges in the courts or send new proposals to the next legislature after the election, energy minister Rocio Nahle has said.

The reforms could lead to fewer players in the market, limiting competition, pushing up prices, and increasing state-owned Pemex's market share and power, Mexico's competition watchdog (Cofece) has warned.

Yet the fuels sector could also have an impact on the mid-term election.

Mexico's president has understood the weight of fuel prices on voters, as some of the country's biggest protests in recent years came in response to the lifting of price caps in 2017. He vowed that fuel prices will not rise above inflation, but during April regular gasoline prices increased by 35pc from the same period of 2020, pushed by increases in international prices. That is much more than the inflation for that same period that rose 6.1pc. The government has not been entirely clear on the timeframe it uses to measure this pledge.

The president further highlighted his drive toward fuel self sufficiency recently with Pemex's deal to buy Shell's majority interest in its joint venture 340,000 b/d refinery in Deer Park, Texas, on 24 May — 13 days before the election.

Power upstream

The election could help decide similar legislative challenges for power and gas, and provide hints on upstream policy.

Lopez Obrador's incremental approach to re-establishing Pemex and CFE monopolies — initially timid regulatory changes and directives to energy regulators to favor state companies where possible — have been thwarted by legal action.

Amid the failure to assert his policy aims within the existing legal framework, Lopez Obrador launched a fast-tracked electricity reform in February that sought to definitively establish CFE's market dominance and revoke a number of private-sector generation permits. The law is now subject to more than 30 private sector injunctions and several supreme court challenges.

If courts permanently throw out the new electricity law, Lopez Obrador's only remaining option would be reforming constitutional energy provisions.

A majority could also embolden Lopez Obrador to take steps to reduce existing private sector participation in the upstream industry. The president has vowed to respect the 111 exploration and production contracts awarded in the three upstream auctions, but attempts to revoke existing contracts in the power sector have rattled investors.

The election "is an inflection point for Mexican politics," said Barela of Borderplex, who was formerly New Mexico's economic development cabinet secretary. "I can only assume that pragmatism will ultimately win out and that the leaders of the Morena party will realize the business sector is not their enemy. It is in fact the sector which will generate the revenue that they will need to provide the social benefits that they so desperately want to distribute."


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24/04/24

Australia’s Woodside pledges extra domestic gas in 2025

Australia’s Woodside pledges extra domestic gas in 2025

Sydney, 24 April (Argus) — Australian independent Woodside Energy has promised to increase gas flows to domestic customers with a predicted national shortfall. The firm promises to make an extra 32PJ (854mn m³) available to the Western Australia (WA) domestic market by the end of 2025, Woodside chief executive Meg O'Neill said at its annual meeting in Perth on 24 April, following criticism of the state's LNG projects' contribution to WA supplies . Woodside produced 76PJ for the WA market in 2023. The company has initiated an expression of interest process for an additional 50PJ of gas from its Bass Strait fields offshore Victoria state for supply in 2025 and 2026 when a tight market is expected for east Australia . Woodside also said its Sangomar oil project offshore Senegal is 96pc complete with 19 of 23 initial wells complete. WA's Scarborough project is 62pc complete with trunkline installation and well drilling having started in the offshore Carnarvon basin. It last month awarded the sub-sea marine installation contract for its 100,000 b/d Trion project offshore Mexico, which is targeting its first oil in 2028. Woodside's 2023 operating revenue was $14bn , resulting in a profit of $1.7bn. Climate tensions Woodside's climate transition action plan saw 58.36pc opposition from shareholders at the annual meeting but is non-binding on the company. Woodside's 2021 climate report also faced significant opposition with 48.97pc voting against its adoption. The company did not put its 2022 climate report up for vote at last year's annual meeting. Its new emissions abatement target aims to reduce Woodside's customers' scope 1 and 2 emissions by 5mn t/yr by 2030, along with a $5bn investment in new energy projects by the same date. Net equity scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions rose to 5.53mn t carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) in 2023 from 4.61mn t CO2e in 2022 because of its merger with BHP Petroleum in mid-2022. Several major institutional shareholders including large domestic and international pension funds had already flagged their vote against Woodside's climate report, citing an insufficient urgency to reduce the firm's emissions. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

China's Hunan Yuneng to build Spain battery LFP plant


24/04/24
24/04/24

China's Hunan Yuneng to build Spain battery LFP plant

Beijing, 24 April (Argus) — Chinese battery cathode producers have continued to expand investment in the overseas market, with the country's largest lithium iron phosphate (LFP) producer Hunan Yuneng planning to build a plant in Spain. Yuneng plans to invest 982mn yuan ($135.5mn) to build a 50,000 t/yr LFP production plant in Spain's Extremadura region. The firm aims to complete the site construction in 15 months after obtaining approval from the authorities. It will establish a subsidiary Yuneng International (Spain) New Energy Battery Material to develop this project. It did not disclose more details such as the launch dates. "This project is to strengthen the company's position in the global market and meet demand from overseas consumers, on the back of growing demand for LFP cathodes in the overseas market driven by the development of new energy vehicles outside China, especially in Europe," Yuneng said. Yuneng produced 504,400t of LFP cathodes in 2023, up by 50pc from a year earlier, with sales also rising by 56pc to 506,800t over the same period. It has achieved a nameplate capacity of 700,000 t/yr for LFP as of the end of 2023. It is also expanding capacity for another emerging battery cathode material, lithium manganese iron phosphate, which has higher energy density and allows for a longer driving range in electric vehicles (EVs), better performance in winter temperatures, and has lower manufacturing costs compared with LFP. Overseas expansions A growing number of Chinese battery cathode firms have accelerated their investment in overseas production projects, such as in France, Morocco and South Korea , to diversify resource origins and meet market entry conditions to the US required by the Inflation Reduction Act, and to cope with restrictions on key battery materials in the EU's Critical Raw Materials Act. Argus forecasts total demand for EV battery cathode material will reach 7.7mn t by 2034, from only 1mn t in 2022, with LFP expected to continue to take up the bigger share compared with ternary battery cathodes. Argus -assessed costs for cathode active material LFP were $13.95/kwh on 23 April, up from $12.31/kwh at the start of this year. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Vancouver Aframax rates at 6-month lows ahead of TMX


23/04/24
23/04/24

Vancouver Aframax rates at 6-month lows ahead of TMX

Houston, 23 April (Argus) — An oversupply of Aframax-size crude tankers on the west coast of the Americas in anticipation of the Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) pressured Vancouver-loading rates to six-month lows on 19 April. With the 590,000 b/d TMX project expected to commence commercial service on 1 May, shipowners have positioned more vessels to be on the west coast to satisfy anticipated demand in Vancouver, but that demand has yet to materialize, leaving the Aframax market oversupplied for now, market participants said. Aframax rates from Vancouver to the US west coast began falling in mid-to-late March as an increase of ballasters added to tonnage in the region, helping drop the rate to ship 80,000t of Cold Lake on that route to $1.50/bl on 19 April from $2.55/bl on 21 March, according to Argus data. The rate held at $1.50/bl on 22 April, the lowest since 2 October and just 3¢/bl higher than the lowest rate since Argus began assessing the route on 21 April 2023. Similarly, the Vancouver-China Aframax rate also fell to a six-month low of $6.59/bl for Cold Lake on 19 April, down from $7.78/bl on 2 April, according to Argus data. In addition to the ballasters, two Aframaxes — the Jag Lokesh and the New Activity — are hauling Argentinian crude to the US west coast and are expected to begin discharging on 3 and 6 May, respectively, according to Vortexa. The Argentinian port of Puerto Rosales is mostly restricted to Panamaxes but can accommodate smaller Aframaxes. Downward pressure from across canal A recent slump in the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Aframax market, due in part to falling Mexican crude exports to the US Gulf coast , has exerted additional downward pressure, a shipowner said. "Though markets at each side of the (Panama) Canal are different, softer sentiment looms in the region," the shipowner said. Last week, a charterer hired two Aframaxes for west coast Panama-US west coast voyages, the first at WS102.5 and the second at WS95, equivalent to $12.71/t and $11.78/t, respectively, as multiple shipowners competed for the cargoes. The Vancouver Aframax market typically draws from the same pool of vessels as the west coast Panama market. For example, the Yokosuka Spirit , one of the Aframaxes hired to load in west coast Panama, discharged a Cold Lake cargo in Los Angeles on 21-22 April after loading in Vancouver in mid-March, according to Vortexa and market participants. By Tray Swanson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US oil and gas deals slowing after record 1Q: Enverus


23/04/24
23/04/24

US oil and gas deals slowing after record 1Q: Enverus

New York, 23 April (Argus) — US oil and gas sector mergers will likely slow for the rest of the year following a record $51bn in deal in the first quarter, according to consultancy Enverus. Transactions slowed in March and the second quarter appears to have already lost momentum, according to Enverus, following the year-end 2023 surge in consolidation that spurred an unprecedented $192bn of upstream deals last year. The Permian shale basin of west Texas and southeastern New Mexico continued to dominate mergers and acquisitions, as companies competed for the remaining high-quality inventory on offer. Acquisitions were led by Diamondback Energy's $26bn takeover of closely-held Endeavor Energy Resources . Others include APA buying Callon Petroleum for $4.5bn in stock and Chesapeake Energy's $7.4bn takeover of Southwestern Energy . The deal cast a spotlight on the remaining private family-owned operators, such as Mewbourne Oil and Fasken Oil & Ranch, which would be highly sought after if they decided to put themselves up for sale. "However, there are no indications these closely held companies are looking to exit any time soon," said Andrew Dittmar, principal analyst at Enverus. "That leaves public explorers and producers (E&P) looking to scoop up the increasingly thin list of private E&Ps backed by institutional capital and built with a sale in mind — or figuring out ways to merge with each other." Deals including ExxonMobil's $59.5bn takeover of Pioneer Natural Resources, as well as Chevron's $53bn deal for Hess, have attracted the attention of anti-trust regulators. The Federal Trade Commission has also sought more information on the Chesapeake/Southwestern deal. "The most likely outcome is all these deals get approved but federal regulatory oversight may pose a headwind to additional consolidation within a single play," said Dittmar. "That may force buyers to broaden their focus by acquiring assets in multiple plays." By Stephen Cunningham Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

USGC LNG-VLSFO discount to steady itself


23/04/24
23/04/24

USGC LNG-VLSFO discount to steady itself

New York, 23 April (Argus) — The premium for US Gulf coast (USGC) very low-sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) to LNG is expected to linger but not widen this spring, maintaining interest in LNG as a bunkering fuel. US Gulf coast LNG prices slipped from a premium to a discount to VLSFO in March 2023 and have remained there since. The discount surpassed 200/t VLSFO-equivalent in January (see chart). Both LNG and VLSFO prices are expected to remain under downward pressure due to high inventories, which could keep the current LNG discount steady. The US winter natural gas withdrawal season ended with 39pc more natural gas in storage compared with the five-year average, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA). Henry Hub natural gas monthly average prices dropped below $2/mmBtu in February, for the first time since September 2020, Argus data showed. The EIA expects the US will produce less natural gas on average in the second and third quarter of 2024 compared with the first quarter of 2024. Despite lower production, the US will have the most natural gas in storage on record when the winter withdrawal season begins in November, says the EIA. As a result, the agency forecasts the Henry Hub spot price to average less than $2/mmBtu in the second quarter before "increasing slightly" in the third quarter. EIA's forecast for all of 2024 averages about $2.20/mmBtu. US Gulf coast VLSFO is facing downward price pressure as demand falls and increased refinery activity signals a potential supply build . Rising Gulf coast refinery activity was likely behind some of the drop in prices. Gulf coast refinery utilization last week rose to 91.4pc, the highest in 12 weeks and up by 0.9 percentage points from the prior week. US Gulf coast suppliers are also eyeing strong fuel oil price competition from eastern hemisphere ports such as Singapore and Zhoushan, China, importing cheap Russian residual fuel oil. In general, LNG's substantial discount to VLSFO has kept interest in LNG for bunkering from ship owners with LNG-burning vessels high. The EIA discontinued publishing US bunker sales statistics with the last data available for 2020. But data from the Singapore Maritime & Port Authority, where the LNG–VLSFO discount widened to over $200/t VLSFOe in February, showed Singapore LNG for bunkering demand increase 11.4 times to 75,900t in the first quarter compared with 6,700t in the first quarter of 2023 and 110,900t for full year 2022. By Stefka Wechsler US Gulf coast LNG vs VLSFO $/t VLSFOe Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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