Saturday, February 7, 2026

2 dead, 700K barrels of output lost in Gulf offshore platform fire

A fire that broke out on a Pemex offshore oil platform on Friday killed two workers and held up 700,000 barrels of oil production, the company has confirmed.

In a statement released on its website, the state oil company said that two workers from an outsourced company died in the fire, while another is still missing. Five outsourced workers and three Pemex employees were also injured, including one with burns on 35% of his body, but they are not at risk of losing their lives.

Nohoch Alpha platform on fire
Images on social media showed the Nohoch-A platform ablaze early Friday morning. (Twitter)

“Regarding production, the incident implied a loss of 700,000 barrels because they closed practically all the wells in the area,” Pemex CEO Octavio Romero said in a video released on Twitter posted on Saturday.

However, he added, 600,000 barrels of production had resumed by Saturday afternoon, giving hope that output could soon return to normal levels.

In an earlier statement, Pemex said that “technicians are studying how to repair the pipelines, interconnections and other works” but stressed that looking for the missing worker was the company’s “number-one priority.”

The fire was triggered by an explosion early Friday on the Nohoch-A link platform of the company’s Cantarell Field, in the Gulf of Campeche, also known as the Bay of Campeche. It then spread to a compression complex, where the two workers lost their lives. More than 300 people were evacuated, the news agency Reuters reported.

The Cantrell oil field was once one of Mexico’s most productive sites. It still produced 170 million barrels per day. (Pemex/Cuartoscuro)

Located about 85 kilometers offshore from Ciudad del Carmen, Campeche, Canterell was once one of the world’s most productive oil fields. Although its output has declined in recent years, it still produces around 170 million barrels per day.

Pemex has faced several safety scandals in recent years, including a ruptured underwater gas pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico that killed five people in 2021. In February, three fires broke out at three separate Pemex facilities on the same day.

In its public statements, Pemex said that Friday’s fire “has already been controlled, and work will be done to find the root cause.” 

The company also said that the workers affected will receive full support.

With reports from Reuters

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
President Sheinbaum in front of a large seal reading Estados Unidos Mexicanos

Mexico’s week in review: Cuba dispute escalates as Mexico faces security challenges at home

0
The honeymoon phase of Sheinbaum's presidency may coming to a close, with pressure ramping up over security problems at home and diplomatic disputes with the US abroad during the first week of February.
The Rio Grande runs along the Mexican border through Big Bend National Park

Mexico commits to make yearly water deliveries to US after tariff threats

1
The 1944 water treaty remains in force, with Mexico agreeing to take steps to avoid a repeat of the recent non-compliance issues by making yearly minimum water deliveries.

Puebla students build nanosatellite to keep Mexico safe from volcanic eruptions

0
A team of Puebla college students just launched a satellite to monitor Popocatépetl, Mexico's most dangerous active volcano, from space.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity