Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Lack of third-party petroleum infrastructure is an issue for Mexico

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pemex tank farm
Pemex holds all the cards when it comes to storage facilities.

In conjunction with the deregulation of the fuel markets, the Secretariat of Energy (Sener) created the public policy on minimum stocks of oil products in August 2017.

The policy obliges importers of refined products to maintain minimum inventories of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel in all regions of the country in order to reduce the risk of lack of supply and not to depend wholly on Pemex’s infrastructure.

However, following a dramatic realization that markets have not developed as anticipated, Sener issued a change to the policy on December 6. The amendment was issued to accommodate the current nature of the fuels market and the lack of infrastructure in the private sector.

Only five storage terminals are in operation across the whole country, mainly due to a lack of clarity in real market pricing and clients willing to exit Pemex contracts and lock in private contracts for the long term.

This has been a real issue since Mexico lacks any tangible third-party infrastructure, meaning the population is at the beck and call of Pemex assets only. Importers have struggled to attain long term contracts with end users since Mexicans recognize that it is hard to fulfill their demand without storage tanks, transloading facilities and consolidated logistics in the form of trucking.

In essence, we are experiencing a standoff situation where importers are hesitant to invest in infrastructure and clients locally do not want to sign long term contracts with suppliers due to a lack of infrastructure and their concerns over being left shortly of supply.

CFE power generation plants

The Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) has announced it will develop seven power generation plants next year that will collectively provide additional capacity of 3,762 megawatts (MW) to the national electric system.

CEO Manuel Bartlett joined President López Obrador at his morning press conference Monday, confirming that the development of the seven plants will require a joint investment estimated at 58.64 million pesos (US $3 million).

He added that six of them will use natural gas and fuel, while the seventh — CI Baja California Sur VI — will begin operating solely with fuel oil, although second stage plans will have it using natural gas.

The seven centers will be located in San Luis Río Colorado, Sonora; Baja California (two projects); San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí; Salamanca, Guanajuato; Dos Bocas, Veracruz; and Mérida, Yucatán.

It is intriguing to see a government push for the use of fuel oil at these plants, supporting Pemex refinery production where bottom of the barrel fuel oil is produced in higher quantities than gasoline and middle distillates such as diesel.

The timing of this announcement sits uncoincidentally close to the introduction of IMO 2020 where the International Maritime Organization, headquartered in London, will implement a low sulphur regulation that comes into effect on January 1. The policy requires all shipping companies to reduce their sulphur emissions by 85%.

Consequently, higher demand for low sulphur distillate fuels will push refineries worldwide to use middle distillates such as diesel-based MGO (marine gasoil describes marine fuels that consist exclusively of distillates and is similar to diesel fuel, but has a higher density), diesel (especially ultra-low sulphur diesel) and jet fuel to blend down high sulphur fuel oil and produce the compliant fuel.

Pemex does not have the capacity to produce more of the middle distillates necessary meaning the company is now “long” fuel oil, allowing us to understand better why Bartlett will continue to use fuel oil in plants: to support another state entity, Pemex, by buying its refined fuel production.

Private win for renewable energy certificates

Mexico, the world’s 12th-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, has been seen a forward thinker on climate policy and sustainability in the past decade. There had been a real shift and sustained focus on developing wind and solar assets in the country before the advent of the Morena party this time last year.

However, in late October, all those previous efforts were called into question when the Secretariat of Energy and the López Obrador cabinet decided to ruffle the feathers of pro-renewable lobbyists and companies.

Morena announced it was going to adapt the market rules for clean energy certificates, known as CELs. The rationale for creating the credits was to give producers incentive to adopt more renewable energy assets and help Mexico achieve its national climate goals. Those goals include increasing clean energy’s share of the national energy market from 25% in 2018 to 35% in 2024 and 50% by 2050.

The certificates would only be available for projects that commenced operations after 2014. But the new rules make older producers, including non-operating hydroelectric dams, eligible to receive the incentives too. Beyond the obvious market interference, the changes further compromised Mexico’s clean energy goals by effectively allowing the Federal Electricity Commission to utilize older energy production.

It did not take long for the largest wind and solar companies that had won projects in Mexico to revolt against the change. Consequently, a federal judge in Mexico City overturned the rule change within days. Critics feared that if older government-supported assets were subject to accessing loans, newer projects would have a lower asset value and undermine investment in clean energy.

On Tuesday of this week, the federal judiciary decided to keep the original market rules in place, indicating that the original design of the CELs will remain unchanged until the final resolution of the amparo lawsuits. An amparo lawsuit can be translated loosely as a guarantee of protection of an individual’s constitutional rights: this protection is provided for under Mexico’s constitutional law and the Amparo Law.

The Energy Secretariat’s move to grant old, state-run clean energy producers the right to sell CELs, originally designed for renewable power plants, was met with heavy criticism by Mexican wind and solar associations. The temporary win for supporters of renewables and foreign direct investment will praise this ruling, proving that the judicial system in Mexico works in benefit of laws constituted for the benefit of the nation.

It remains to be seen whether the suspension can be overturned but this news will be welcomed by foreign investors concerned about the rule of law in Mexico as well as aiding Mexico in achieving its targets in the Paris Agreement on climate change.

The writer is the founder of Indimex Group, a Mexico City company focused on the procurement, marketing, trading and optimizing of refined petroleum products as well as investing in and operating physical assets for the movement of fuels in Mexico and the United States. His bulletin about developments in the Mexican energy industry appears weekly on Mexico News Daily.

With January raise Guanajuato police will be best paid: governor

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guanajuato police
Soon to be Mexico's best-paid cops.

Police in Guanajuato, Mexico’s most violent state in the first 10 months of the year, will be the best paid in the country starting in January.

Governor Diego Sinhue Rodríguez Vallejo announced on Wednesday that state police will receive salaries of 24,400 pesos (US $1,280), leaving officers with take-home pay of just over 20,000 pesos.

Speaking at a graduation ceremony at the state police academy, Sinhue said that raising the salaries of officers from their current net rate of 15,000 pesos will cost the government 450 million pesos (US $23.6 million) next year.

The pay rise will lift officers’ salaries above those of their counterparts in Sonora, who are currently the best paid in Mexico with monthly net wages of just over 19,000 pesos.

The benefits afforded to police in Guanajuato are already among the best in the country.

Officers have access to housing credits, pension funds and education scholarships for their children, while the families of police killed in the line of duty receive financial support from the government in addition to life insurance payouts.

Sinhue said the aim of the pay increase, which will also lift Guanajuato officers’ salaries above those received by members of the National Guard, is to prevent corruption in the state force and encourage greater commitment to the job.

He said Guanajuato officers will also be provided with the equipment they need to do their job effectively, highlighting that the state force will take possession of 40 new police cars and 420 body-worn cameras.

The state government invested about 200 million pesos in police equipment and training this year, the National Action Party governor said, and will lay off more government personnel in 2020 to increase spending on security.

There were 2,255 homicides in Guanajuato between January and October, according to the National Public Security System, 3% more than in Baja California, which was the second most violent state.

The Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel are engaged in a turf war in the state, once considered among the safest in Mexico.

Source: El Financiero (sp) 

Environment secretary bullish on lithium, calls it Mexico’s ‘new oil’

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Environment Secretary Toledo is also big on solar energy: 'We're going to be a solar energy power.'
Environment Secretary Toledo is also big on solar energy: 'We're going to be a solar energy power.'

Lithium will be Mexico’s “new oil,” Environment Secretary Víctor Manuel Toledo said on Thursday, highlighting the country’s large deposits of the metal used in the manufacture of batteries, among other products.

In fact, the biggest lithium project in the world is in Sonora, according to the company Mining Technology.

It said in August that the mine being developed by Canada’s Bacanora Minerals and China’s Ganfeng Lithium in the municipality of Bacadéhuachi is estimated to hold proven and probable reserves of 243.8 million tonnes, containing 4.5 million tonnes of lithium-carbonate equivalent.

Bacanora has been operating a pilot plant in Hermosillo for the past four years, producing what it says is high-quality, battery-grade lithium carbonate samples for potential customers.

Construction of the mine was first announced by Sonora Governor Claudia Pavlovich in May 2018 and is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2020. Production capacity in its first stage of operations is expected to be 15,500 tonnes per year of lithium carbonate, Mining Technology said, while capacity will double to 35,000 tonnes per year in a second stage.

That prospect led Toledo to declare that lithium will be Mexico’s “new oil.”

Bacanora's pilot project in Hermosillo, Sonora.
Bacanora’s pilot project in Hermosillo, Sonora.

Potential lithium reserves have also been identified in Baja California, San Luis Potosí and Zacatecas.

The metal, Toledo reporters at the presidential press conference, is “the base not just of computers but also storage batteries” for cell phones and electric cars, among other products.

Therefore, “Mexico should be capable of making electric cars in public factories,” he said, adding that the secretariats of the Environment and Energy are currently analyzing that possibility with Mexico’s “best experts” in the field.

“We’re also one of the richest counties in solar radiation and we’re going to be a country that exports energy to the United States and Latin America,” Toledo added.

“The two most important areas in Latin America for solar radiation are the northeast of Mexico, the deserts, and the border between Chile and Bolivia . . . We’re going to be a solar energy power.”

Source: El Financiero (sp), El Imparcial (sp), Publimetro (sp)  

Ex-security chief facing drug charges built a small fortune over 6 years

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García during his tenure as Mexico's top security official.
García during his tenure as Mexico's top security official.

Former president Felipe Calderón’s public security secretary, arrested on Monday for allegedly taking multimillion-dollar bribes from the Sinaloa Cartel, built a small fortune in just six years.

Declarations of assets filed by Genaro García Luna with the Secretariat of Public Administration (SFP) between 2002 and 2008 show that his wealth increased fivefold in the period.

As director of the now-defunct Federal Investigation Agency, García declared in 2002 that he had annual income of 1.73 million pesos and owned two houses worth 450,000 and 522,000 pesos as well as shop premises valued at 214,000 pesos.

He also said he owned a Harley-Davidson motorcycle worth almost 195,000 pesos and that he had 265,000 pesos in the bank.

As public security secretary six years later, García declared annual income of 3.82 million pesos – more than double his 2002 income – and said he owned a 310-square-meter house worth 7.55 million pesos. He didn’t provide any information about vehicles he owned or how much money he had in the bank.

The Florida home where García moved after leaving Mexico in 2013.
The Florida home where García moved after leaving Mexico in 2013.

Tax authorities never asked García to explain the rapid increase in his personal wealth.

The newspaper El Universal, which had access to the declarations of assets, said the home declared by García in 2008 is located in Jardines de la Montaña, an upscale residential area in the southern Mexico City borough of Tlalpan.

In the years between 2002 and 2008, García declared the purchase and sale of several properties and informed the SFP that he owned a Land Rover Discovery SUV and two Mustangs.

Between 2009 and 2012 – the final four years that he served as Calderón’s security secretary – García didn’t provide updated information about his wealth, El Universal reported.

At the conclusion of his six-year tenure as secretary, a period during which he was a key architect of the so-called war on drugs, García moved to Miami, Florida, where he rented a US $3.3-million mansion. He also rented a US $2.2-million penthouse in Aventura, Florida.

The United States indictment against García, unsealed on Tuesday, said that Sinaloa Cartel bagmen personally delivered payments to the former official in briefcases that contained between US $3 million and $5 million.

It also said that he lied about his past criminal involvement with the Sinaloa Cartel when he applied for U.S. citizenship in 2018.

If convicted of receiving cartel bribes, García Luna faces a prison sentence of between 10 years and life.

During a brief appearance in a federal court in Dallas, Texas, on Tuesday, García was a “bundle of nerves,” El Universal reported, adding that his image as the strongman of Mexico’s security policy was a distant memory. Dressed in jeans and a sweater, the 51-year-old listened intently to a translation of the charges against him.

He remained serious and taciturn throughout the 10-minute hearing before being led out of the court to be transferred to a local prison. García wasn’t required to enter a plea.

He faces another hearing in the same court on Tuesday but a trial would be held in the New York court where drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán was found guilty in February.

In a Twitter post Tuesday, ex-president Calderón denied any knowledge of García’s alleged collusion with the Sinaloa Cartel and said that he was “deeply” surprised by the accusations against him.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

UNESCO declares talavera intangible cultural heritage

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Talavera recognized by UNESCO for its heritage value.
Talavera recognized by UNESCO for its heritage value.

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has declared the Mexican and Spanish pottery style known as talavera an intangible cultural heritage.

The pottery is made in the Mexican states of Puebla and Tlaxcala and the Spanish towns of Talavera de la Reina and El Puente del Arzobispo.

In Mexico, the communities of Atlixco, Cholula, Tecali de Herrera and Puebla city, where the pottery is produced, are colloquially referred to as the “Talavera zone.”

Puebla Tourism Secretary Fabiana Briseño Suárez said the centuries-old tradition begun in Spain includes Islamic, Egyptian, Persian, Moroccan and Spanish influences, all of which integrated with the history and art in Mexico after being brought to Mexico during the Spanish conquest.

“An example of [this integration] is the large number of buildings, churches, fountains and facades in Puebla that are masterfully adorned with talavera,” she said.

UNESCO said that although some of the techniques employed to make talavera have changed in both Mexico and Spain, such as the use of electric potter’s wheels, the processes of production, decoration and glazing are still artisanal and identical to those practiced in the 16th century.

“The theoretical knowledge and practices related to this element of living cultural heritage include the preparation of the clay, its formation with a potter’s wheel or mold, the decoration of the formed piece, the preparation of the pigments and glazes and the firing in the kiln, operations that all require great skill,” said the organization.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

Lawyer sends message to Peña Nieto after ex-security chief’s arrest

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Lichtman, García and Peña Nieto
Lichtman, García and Peña Nieto: García is the first ex-official to fall following the Guzmán trial.

The lawyer for convicted drug trafficker Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán wants to know if former president Enrique Peña Nieto still wants to sue him for defamation now that another ex-government official is facing charges.

Jeffrey Lichtman used Twitter on Wednesday to ask Peña Nieto the pointed question after the arrest of Genaro García Luna, security secretary during the administration of former president Felipe Calderón, on charges that he allowed the Sinaloa Cartel to operate in exchange for multimillion-dollar bribes.

“Will @EPN [Peña Nieto] still sue me for defamation as he threatened to a year ago?” Lichtman wrote.

“Or will he and Felipe Calderón hire a different type of lawyer to represent them?” he added, suggesting that the ex-presidents could also be arrested for collusion with organized crime.

In his opening statement at the New York trial of Guzmán in November 2018, Lichtman charged that both received millions of dollars in bribes from the Sinaloa Cartel.

Eduardo Sánchez, presidential spokesman at the time, quickly rejected the claim, pointing out that the Peña Nieto government arrested Guzmán and extradited him to the United States.

“The assertions attributed to his lawyer are completely false and defamatory,” he wrote on Twitter.

Calderón also rejected Lichtman’s claim, calling it “absolutely false and reckless.”

This week he denied any knowledge of García’s alleged collusion with the Sinaloa Cartel and said he was surprised by the accusations against him.

The assertion that Peña Nieto was on the Sinaloa Cartel payroll resurfaced at the Guzmán trial in January when a former Colombian drug lord who worked with El Chapo claimed that he received a US $100-million bribe in October 2012, two months before he took office.

“Mr. Guzmán paid a bribe of $100 million to President Peña Nieto?” Lichtman asked Alex Cifuentes Villa in court on January 15.

“Yes,” Cifuentes replied, asserting that he was told as much by Guzmán. He also said that Peña Nieto had asked the cartel for US $250 million.

The assertions were rejected by the ex-president’s chief of staff, Francisco Guzmán.

In a statement to United States authorities in 2016, Cifuentes said that Calderón had received bribes from the Beltrán Leyva Cartel but at Guzmán’s trial he said that he didn’t recall having made the claim.

Former security secretary García was also named at the trial when the brother of Sinaloa Cartel leader Ismael Zambada testified that he gave him a suitcase containing $3 million in bribe money.

There were suspicions before the trial began that witnesses might name senior government officials who were on the cartel payroll. Several were named, but García is the first to be arrested.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Gunmen attack police station, kill 3 officers in Guanajuato

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Safest city in Guanajuato, says mayor.
Safest city in Guanajuato, says mayor.

Gunmen attacked the municipal police station in Villagrán, Guanajuato, on Wednesday, leaving three officers dead and one seriously wounded.

Upon fleeing the scene, the attackers kidnapped three other officers and a judge.

During their escape, the gunmen burned a vehicle on a bridge in nearby Sarabia, nine kilometers west of Villagrán, where an army base is located, presumably to block the route of security forces in pursuit.

The attack occurred around 8:00pm when at least 15 armed civilians arrived at the station aboard three vehicles as the officers were changing shifts.

They attacked the station with high-powered rifles and grenades, initiating an “intense” gunfight that lasted about 10 minutes, according to neighbors.

The National Guard and state police arrived on the scene to secure the area and track the possible escape routes taken by the attackers, but there have been no arrests.

Minutes after the attack, another group of armed men set fire to a truck to block access to the army barracks in nearby Sarabia, nine kilometers west of Villagrán.

A message presumably left by the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) was found in the community of Valtierrilla, Salamanca, but its contents were not released.

The attack on police came just after Villagrán Mayor Juan Lara Mendoza declared on Tuesday that his city was the safest in Guanajuato.

Two of Lara’s nephews were arrested in March during an operation to find José Antonio “El Marro” Yépez Ortiz, presumed leader of the Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel. The mayor has denied having any connection with the cartel.

Santa Rosa de Lima is located in the municipality of Villagrán. The cartel of the same name competes with the CJNG for control of the region.

Sources: El Financiero (sp), Milenio (sp), Proceso (sp)

Submarine captured in Peru with tonne of coke was Mexico-bound

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The narco-submarine captured in Peruvian waters.
The narco-submarine captured in Peruvian waters.

A submarine carrying over a tonne of cocaine was bound for Mexico when it was captured off the coast of Peru on Saturday, according to Peruvian officials.

“We’re talking about more than a tonne of cocaine, [but] we’re still weighing [it],” Attorney General Jorge Chávez said.

Traveling aboard the submarine were two Colombians, an Ecuadorian and a Mexican. All four were arrested.

Chávez said the vessel was loaded in a mangrove forest in Ecuador near the border with Peru.

He did not explain why the ship entered Peru’s territorial waters, to the south of Ecuador, if it aimed to travel north to Mexico.

Painted a greyish color meant to blend in with the surface of the ocean, the partially submersible craft was towed to the port of Paita, about 1,000 kilometers north of Lima.

“This is the first submarine captured in Peru. As of now, we know that the ship’s destination was Mexico,” said Chávez.

“We’re asking the navy for a technical report on its construction,” he said.

He said his office was unaware of which criminal organization the men were working for.

Drug cartels began to use submarines to transport their products in 2005, and it is believed that they are built in Colombia, Ecuador or Guyana.

Peru produces over 400 tonnes of cocaine a year, according to that country’s anti-drug agency, and the majority of it is exported via maritime routes. Peru is one of the world’s largest producers of coca and cocaine, according to the United Nations, although Colombia is the world leader.

Source: Milenio (sp)  

Families say victims’ belongings stolen after Oaxaca bus accident

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The bus that was carrying farmworkers home to Oaxaca.
The bus that was carrying farmworkers home to Oaxaca.

Survivors and relatives of passengers who died in a bus accident in Oaxaca on Wednesday say that some of the victims’ belongings were stolen after the incident.

The bus was transporting Oaxacan laborers from Hermosillo, Sonora, when it rolled over on the Oaxaca-Mexico City highway near the town of San Pablo Huitzo. The accident left two dead and over 40 injured.

After the incident, some people reported that their wallets, cell phones and other belongings had disappeared.

Police said they had taken some items for safekeeping and were investigating those that were still missing.

Providing an update on the accident, Health Secretary Donato Casas said that only one of the seriously injured had been discharged from the hospital as of Thursday and that 10 still remained.

Red Cross official Moisés Santiago said a shelter had been set up for the 24 victims who were still unable to complete the journey to their hometowns due to minor injuries.

He said that 15 others are already with their families and added that the Oaxacan government has offered to help with transporting them home so they can arrive in time to celebrate the holidays as planned. The victims are from four municipalities in the southern sierra.

Relatives of the victims hope to meet with representatives of the Sonoran company that hired the agricultural workers so that it will take responsibility for the medical costs and provide compensation.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Government orders dismissal of head of exploration at Pemex for corruption

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Lozada, left, and Pemex CEO Octavio Romero.
Lozada, left, and Pemex CEO Octavio Romero.

The federal government has ordered the dismissal of the head of exploration and production at Pemex and disqualified him from holding any public position for 10 years for his alleged involvement in the embezzlement scheme known as the “Master Fraud.”

The Secretariat of Public Administration (SFP) said in a statement Wednesday that it filed complaints against Miguel Ángel Lozada Aguilar with the federal Attorney General’s Office (FGR) in April after an investigation detected that he had likely engaged in criminal activity.

An FGR investigation found irregularities in Lozada’s financial circumstances. He omitted details from his declarations of assets for four consecutive years from 2014 to 2017.

The official’s failure to disclose two bank accounts and the financial benefits he obtained from the ownership of a property violated federal law, the SFP said. Lozada was unable to justify why he didn’t report the details, the statement said.

The SFP said the sanctions complied with a request from President López Obrador to remove officials from Pemex who were involved in the “Master Fraud,” a scheme in which 11 federal agencies diverted billions of pesos in government funds during the administration of former president Enrique Peña Nieto. The scheme employed phony contracts with public universities and shell companies.

The statement noted that López Obrador said in January that if any high-ranking Pemex officials appointed by his government are found to have been involved in the “Master Fraud,” they must be dismissed.

Lozada was notified of the sanctions against him on Wednesday and it will be up to Pemex to remove him from his role, the SFP said.

“. . . The Secretariat of Public Administration will supervise the effective application of the sanctions and be respectful of the decisions . . . taken by other authorities,” the statement said.

“Secretary Irma Eréndira Sandoval Ballesteros reconfirms her commitment to continue combatting corruption and impunity . . . within the framework of the new public ethics that guide the government of Mexico.”

Source: El Universal (sp), Milenio (sp)