Monday, May 13, 2024

AMLO announces start of petroleum production at Olmeca refinery

The new Pemex refinery on the Gulf coast of Tabasco will commence production on Friday, President López Obrador announced Friday morning.

“The new Dos Bocas refinery will begin producing petroleum today,” he said during his fifth annual report, a State of the Union-style address delivered this year in Campeche city.

AMLO at fifth annual report
The president gave his fifth annual report on Friday in Campeche. (Gob MX)

López Obrador didn’t specify what kind of fuel will initially be produced at the state oil company’s refinery in the Paraíso municipality of Tabasco.

However, he said that 290,000 barrels of gasoline will be produced there daily by the end of the year.

The facility, officially called the Olmeca Refinery, was inaugurated in July 2022, even though it wasn’t finished and hadn’t begun processing crude oil. The first shipment of crude was transferred to the refinery earlier this year. Refining capacity is slated to reach 340,000 barrels per day (bpd) at some point.

According to a government document obtained by the El Universal newspaper last year, the final cost of building the new refinery in López Obrador’s home state will be just over US $20 billion, more than double the original estimate of $8.9 billion.

Olmeca refinery in Dos Bocas, Tabasco
The Olmeca refinery was inaugurated in 2022, and was to begin operations earlier this year, but has had setbacks. (Gob MX)

In 2019, the government scrapped a bidding process to build it on the grounds that the bids submitted by private companies were too high and they would take too long to complete it. Pemex and the Energy Ministry were subsequently given responsibility for the project.

Some analysts have been critical of the government’s decision to build the refinery, arguing that the project diverts resources from Pemex’s more profitable exploration business.

But López Obrador, a staunch energy nationalist, asserts that the refinery – one of several major infrastructure projects undertaken by the current government – will help Mexico reach self sufficiency for fuel, an objective he wants to achieve before he leaves office in late 2024.

In Campeche on Friday, he said that Pemex’s six other refineries in Mexico have been upgraded “with an investment of 70 billion pesos,” about US $4.1 billion at the current exchange rate.

Deer Park Refinery owned by Pemex in Texas
The president’s plan to restore Mexico’s oil self-sufficiency not only includes the new Olmeca refinery but also upgrading existing refineries and buying the former Shell Deer Park Refinery in Texas. (Pemex Deer Park/Facebook)

“That’s why production has increased from 38% [of capacity] to 60%,” López Obrador said without mentioning that refining levels last month dropped well below the target needed for self sufficiency.

The Deer Park refinery near Houston, Texas, that is now fully owned by Pemex after it bought Shell Oil Company’s 50% share in early 2022 is processing 340,000 bpd, he said, noting that the facility has now been fully paid for.

“In 2018 we imported 900,000 barrels of gasoline per day, … which accounted for 80% of national consumption when we got to government. At the end of this year we’ll only be importing 250,000 barrels [per day], which represents 20% of national consumption,” López Obrador said.

“The plan is that next year we won’t buy gasoline or diesel abroad, and all [of Mexico’s] crude oil will be processed here in order to give added value to our raw material and maintain low fuel prices to benefit consumers,” he said.

Mexico News Daily 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Tourists in Puerto Progreso, Yucatán may have gotten more than they bargained for, as city registered temperatures of nearly 45 C

Which 10 Mexican cities just broke high temperature records?

6
Mexico City, Mérida and Puebla were a few of the cities that recorded their hottest temperature ever on Thursday.
Mexican authorities remove fentanyl pills, methamphetamine and cocaine from a drug lab found in Culiacán, Sinaloa, in February.

DEA threat assessment finds Mexican cartel activity in every US state

2
The Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels' dominance in the U.S. "has effectively eliminated any competition in U.S. markets," the DEA reports.
Mexico's second heat wave of the year swept across the country starting on May 3.

Heat wave turns deadly, with deaths in at least 3 states this week

0
From the official start of the hot season on March 17 to May 4, at least seven people died of heat-related illness, the federal Health Ministry reported.