Pemex, electricity commission employees hit hard by Covid-19

Pemex and the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) have been particularly hard hit by the coronavirus with 1,245 confirmed cases between the two.

The state oil company reported 1,092 cases and 141 deaths as of Sunday, which corresponds to an average rate of infection of 20.7 per day and 2.5 daily deaths.

Of those infected, 146 are currently hospitalized and 31 patients are in intensive care.

Pemex, which employs 127,000 workers, reported its first infected employee on March 23, a 52-year-old union worker who earlier that month had taken a trip to Europe accompanied by his wife, daughter and 18-month-old granddaughter. 

As of last week, more Pemex workers had died of coronavirus than nurses despite the fact that the oil company has 30% fewer employees than the number of nurses in Mexico.

Pemex has drawn fire for being slow to enact sanitary measures to prevent the spread of the virus. It only began evacuating workers from offshore platforms at the end of April. The company operates 24 hospitals to care for its employees.

“Pemex continues to implement a comprehensive prevention model to minimize the spread of Covid-19 among our workers, retirees and their families,” the company said in a statement last week. “Healthy distance measures continue to be intensified, as does work at home for administrative activities and vulnerable personnel, sanitary filters, cleaning and sanitation in work centers and distancing of operational personnel.”

The CFE, with some 90,000 employees, has seen 152 cases as of its last report on May 12.

Source: El Universal (sp), Bloomberg (en)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A view of the Magical Town of Ajijic on the shore of Lake Chapala

Chapala official asks foreign residents to follow the rules — and learn some Spanish

11
A municipal official at Lake Chapala has published an open letter to the region's sizable foreign community, addressing complaints about traffic violations, pet etiquette...

Mexico in Numbers: The border state powering Mexico’s export boom

0
Mexico’s exports hit a record in 2025 — but which states are really driving the boom, and which barely contribute? Find out in this week's edition of Mexico in Numbers.
gorilla with popsicle

Zoo animals beat the Mexico City heat with personalized popsicles

0
Creatures slurping popsicles may seem cute, but the "Paletón" program is a proven science-backed strategy for keeping captive animals hydrated and safe from the damage that excessive heat can cause.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity