Mexico energy reform
Transcription
Mexico energy reform
Mexico Energy Reform: Paths Forward Ricardo Falcón IHS CERA Sr. Research Analyst II 1 Key messages: Looking four steps ahead 1 • Where we stand now 2 • Chances for further change in energy sector: main issues and proposals 3 • Challenges and opportunities under Peña Nieto’s Administration 4 • Reality check, conclusions Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 2 Where we stand now: Checklist UPSIDE DOWNSIDE ▲ Continuity of key macroeconomic policies ▲ Relatively smooth electoral process (less polarization) ▲ Interbranch cooperation ▲ Strengthening role of Congress ▲ Proven potential to unlock major reforms ▼ Still-adverse external conditions ▼ Overloaded policy agenda ▼ Limited time frame to embark on politically costly changes ▼ Potential legislative padlocks and political tradeoffs ▼ Still critical security situation Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 3 Gearing up for deeper policy change? The Pact for Mexico and the PRI’s recent political move 5 headings 1. Social rights and freedom 2. Economic growth, employment and competitiveness 3. Security and justice 4. Transparency, accountability and fight against corruption 5. Democratic • governance • 3 key changes Pact for Mexico PRI’s internal statutes Realignment of party agendas More focused lobbying efforts • Coherent policymaking 1. Stronger role of the president in ruling party’s decisionmaking process 2. PRI legislators may now vote on extended VAT to food and medicines 3. Allow greater private investment in the oil sector Legislative consensus? Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 4 The complexities of Mexico’s legislative process Stage 3 Stage 4 Chamber of Origin (CO) First house to review the bill Revising Chamber (RC) Receives CO’s report for review President of the Republic Receives RC’s report for review CO sends bill to committees RC sends report to committees Stage 1 Stage 2 ! A bill is sent by: • President of the Republic • Federal deputies or senators • State legislatures V Agrees? Key: ! V Committees submit a report to the CO Committees submit revised report to the RC CO discusses report in a plenary session* RC discusses report in a plenary session Back to Stage 2 Presidential veto NO Approved? YES NO Source: IHS CERA. *This report is also known as dictamen, and when sent to the revising chamber, it is called minuta. © 2012 IHS Approved? NO YES V Back to Stage 2 (presidential veto) President enforces new law or amendment by issuing it in the official gazette (or DOF) YES YES, BUT with observations to the CO report No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. ! Back to Stage 2 5 Labor, education and telecomm reforms: A good startup? Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 4 Stage 3 • • • • New labor contract flexibility, Payment by the hour, Outsourcing, Salary pay-outs (industrial action), • Gender equality Labor reform • Greater administrative autonomy • Merit-based prof. service • Institutionalized evaluation of education system • Census and database • Full-time schools Education reform Telecomm reform Freezer Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 6 Peña Nieto’s first 100 days in office: Early results UPSIDE DOWNSIDE ▲ Higher approval ratings ▲ Reasserted authority over PRI legislation process ▲ Stronger sovereign debt position ▲ National agenda has been effectively reset ▲ More balanced foreign policy agenda ▼ Higher public scrutiny ▼ Verticality of internal decisionmaking process ▼ Financial and banking system growth challenges ▼ Policy setbacks ▼ Continued exposure to crossborder issues (especially with the US) Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 7 Now what? PRI-led administration still faces numerous challenges Economic growth National security • Drugs trafficking • Organized crime violence • Judicial system • • • • Social development Structural reforms Business environment Energy and environment Drug-related fatalities 500 in 2006 24,000 in 2011 71,000 from 2006 to 2012 1,200,000 forced to migrate Political agenda • Political stability • Governance • Corruption Real GDP Growth Rate: Mexico and USA 6 4 2 Percent change (2) (4) (6) (8) 2008 USA 2010 2012* Mexico 2014* Foreign policy • Mexico-US crossborder issues • Mexico’s role in Latin America • Free trade agreements Source: IHS CERA, IHS Global Insight. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 8 2016* Energy issues: Still a long way to go… Integrity of the • Conceptual Refined Products Balance Distribution Network Cantarell Decline Reserves Replacement Aging Plants, Inefficient Fuels Use Growing Natural Gas Imports Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 9 What might the PRI bring to the energy table? Peña Nieto’s proposals build on 2008 reform Promote strategic alliances to help Pemex diversify exploratory risk Review Pemex’s fiscal regime Build new refineries, allowing private sector participation List Pemex on stock exchange (minority shares) Strengthen the domestic petrochemical industry Boost onshore oil & gas exploration projects New rules for public-private partnership projects Reduce retail electricity tariffs Revise fuels price subsidies Foster renewable energy projects Reduce energy commodities’ production costs Promote research, innovation, and technology transfer Improve Pemex’s corporate governance Ensure Pemex’s transparency and accountability Difficulty level Maintain Pemex under state control Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 10 National Energy Strategy 2013-27: A blueprint of the Peña Nieto Administration’s energy reform plans Strategic goals • GDP growth • Social inclusion Integration elements Policy measures • Efficiency • Security • Sustainability • Transport, storage and distribution • Refining, manufacturing, generation • Oil production • Energy transition Source: IHS CERA, Mexico’s Energy Secretariat (SENER). © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 11 Challenge 1: A heavy-loaded policy agenda National security • • • • • New police corps Anticorruption measures Military strategy US financial and technical aid Government intelligence Fiscal reform • Tax rates • Taxation base • Special tax schemes • Evasion and elusion • Pemex fiscal regime Labor reform • Unions’ transparency and accountability Political reform Judicial reform • • • • Justice administration Judge selection process Oral trials Law enforcement Social development Education system National security Social development & education • • Political reform • Anticorruption agency • More transparency and accountability • Reduce size of Congress Labor reform Social security, food support, health Fiscal reform Extend education networks, financial support, and infrastructure Judicial reform Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 12 Challenge 2: Running against the clock Nov 15 Deadline for deputies to approve next year’s federal spending budget. This process takes place every year. 2012 Ideal time for energy reform 2013 Sep 1 New Congress kicks off next three year period (2012–15). 2014 July Midterm legislative election to renew Chamber of Deputies PRI retains influence in Congress 2016 2015 Mar-Jun Parties hold political campaigns toward the 2015 midterm election. 2018 July Presidential and legislative elections 2016 Sep-Dec New Congress discusses fiscal income and spending budget for 2013. 2017 2017 2018 PRI loses influence in Congress Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 13 Challenge 3: Mexico’s Congress through 2015, a new shift in the balance of power PT 3% PANAL 1% MC 1% Senate PVEM 7% PRD 17% PRI 41% PAN 30% 2006–12 2012–18 PT 3% MC 3% PANAL 2% Deputies PVEM 6% PRI 42% PRD 21% PAN 23% 2009–12 • PRI now leads the Senate, but needs 10% more to at least pass legal amendments • PRI needs the PAN to promote promarket changes • A PAN-PRD coalition may easily block constitutional bills 2012–15 • PRI lost seats but remains the leading political force • Potential legislative padlocks: promarket versus state-centric • PRI may block constitutional changes in favor of status quo Source: IHS CERA, IHS Global Insight, Mexico’s Federal Electoral Institute. Note: PANAL = New Alliance Party; PT = Labor Party; MC = Citizens’ Movement. *Mexico’s Congress is composed of a 128-seat Senate and a 500-seat Chamber of Deputies. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 14 New congress, new opportunities? Leading parties’ energy agenda: Key proposals Oil • • • • • • • • Power Gas Open new spaces for private sector, but still under state control Build new refineries • Reinforce institutional framework and clarify rules for competition • List Pemex on stock exchange JVs for deepwater E&P Private participation in fuels distribution • JVs for unconventional gas development • Promote renewable energy projects Preserve stateownership model Reduce fuels prices Review Pemex fiscal regime • Reduce retail gas prices • Reduce retail power tariffs • Reduce retail power tariffs Promote renewable energy projects Source: IHS CERA. Note: JV = joint venture; E&P = exploration and production. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 15 Chances for further changes in energy legislation: Most likely coalition paths* 48% 48% 7% 48% 1% 78% 30% 1% 6% 7% 6% 7% 6% 50% 1% 1% 73% 23% 70% 65% 30% 41% 42% 23% 58% 63% 21% 17% 61% 63% 3% 2% 3% 66% 17% Source: IHS CERA. *Rounded figures; totals may not coincide with the additions. © 2012 IHS 3% 21% 17% Senate 3% 21% Enough to block constitutional changes Enough to pass legal amendments 3% 69% Deputies Enough to pass constitutional changes No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 16 Zooming into PRI’s real power in Congress Energy committees seat distribution Likely winning coalitions: Coalition Chamber % Share PRI Senate 41 PRI+PVEM Senate 48 PRI+PVEM+PANAL Senate 49 PRI+PVEM+PANAL+PAN Senate 79 PRI+PAN Senate 71 PRI+PRD+PT+MC Senate 71 PRI Deputies 41 PRI+PVEM Deputies 48 PRI+PVEM+PANAL Deputies 50 PRI+PVEM+PANAL+PAN Deputies 73 PRI+PAN Deputies 64 PRI+PRD+PT+MC Deputies 77 Senate PVEM 6% PT 7% PRI 40% PRD 20% PAN 27% Deputies PT MC 7% 3% Other 3% PVEM 7% PRI 40% PRD 17% PAN 23% Source: IHS CERA. Note: PANAL = Partido Nueva Alianza; MC = Movimiento Ciudadano. © 2012 IHS Back No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 17 Mexico’s political map: PRI controls the majority of state governments and legislatures PRI controls 21 of the 32 state governments in Mexico (66%) PRI PAN PRD PRI = PAN PRI PRI = PRD PAN PRD PAN+PRD PRI holds majority in 23 of the 32 state legislatures (72%) Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 18 Energy policy change: What will it take? Share of seats required for congressional approval Senate Chamber of Deputies Higher impact, but less viability Constitutional amendments 4 66% 66% Legal amendments 3 50%+1 50%+1 33%+1 Veto force Lame duck 2 33%+1 1 Fox Calderón Lower impact, but more viability 1 Complexity level 4 Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 19 Pending changes in energy sector* Oil Power Gas Upstream • More competitive wholesale • Allow JVs for deepwater development • List PEMEX shares in stock market • Decarbonize energy mix Downstream • Diversify PEMEX’s exploratory risk • More private participation in • More competitive retail • Further investment autonomy for PEMEX • New financing options 4 • More progressive oil fiscal regime • Further incentives for • Allow JVs for unconventional gas development refining industry • Revise unionized labor 4 3 • Develop new pipeline mechanisms sales regime 3 2 3 electricity market 3 • Implement new first hand 2 4 renewable energy infrastructure investment provisions • Change tariff setting 2 authority 2 • Revise retail power tariff 1 subsidies Source: IHS CERA. *Lists are not exhaustive. © 2012 IHS and electricity market 1 Complexity level 4 No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 20 The “crude” reality: Mexico’s oil production in a continued downtrend 4.0 120 Outlook 3.8 100 3.6 3.4 Million barrels per day 80 3.2 US 3.0 60 dollars 2.8 40 2.6 2.4 2.2 Liquids productive capacity 20 2.0 0 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 Mexican crude basket price (US$/barrel) Fiscal revenue from hydrocarbons production (billion US$) Source: IHS CERA, historical data from PEMEX and SHCP. Note: Total oil revenue includes taxes and duties paid by PEMEX and the company’s own income. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 21 Production decline seems irreversible 4,000 IHS CERA outlook versus PEMEX target 3,500 PEMEX business plan target 3,000 2,500 Thousand barrels per day 2,000 Other fields in production Filling this gap will require reserve additions of 12 billion barrels 1,500 2 million barrels per day gap YTF 1,000 500 Cantarell 0 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022 2024 Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 22 Trión-1 and Supremus-1: The tip of the iceberg? Kunah Trión 1 Supremus 1 Piklis Labay Nen Lakach Noxal Leek Exploratory well Nab Tamil Source: IHS EDIN. © 2012 IHS Nab 1 Noxal 1 Lakach Lalail 1 Tamil 1 Leek 1 Labay 1 Nen 1 Piklis 1 Kunah 1 Trión-1 Supremus 1 Lalai Oil recoverable Gas recoverable Discovery (million barrels) (billion cubic feet) year 16.3 15 175 125 No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 1 180 622 243 2 102 1,200 217 395 140 20 14 2004 2006 2007 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2011 2012 2012 2012 23 Incentive-based service contracts: Far from solving the problem • The contract is attractive for the development of discovered reserves, but its present form does not favor a large exploratory project with substantial risk, such as those in deepwater. • Production volumes expected from the awarded contracts is adding very marginal volumes. 60 Marginal fields of the first bidding round: Production history and outlook Marginal fields of the second bidding round: Better than the first one?* 60 50 50 40 Tierra Blanca 40 Thousand 30 barrels per day 20 San Andres Thousand 30 barrels per day 20 10 Panuco Atun 10 Arenque Magallanes 0 1957 Altamira Carrizo 1967 1977 1987 1997 2007 2017 0 2013 2016 2019 2022 2025 2028 Source: IHS CERA. *Expected production is even lower given that the Arenque and Atun fields were not awarded. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 24 Long lead times despite high investment plans Mexico’s Crude Oil Production and Upstream Investment through 2020 35 2.4 30 2.3 25 2.2 Billion 20 US dollars (2013) 15 10 2.1 Million barrels 2.0 per day 1.9 5 1.8 0 1.7 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Incremental production Additional investment PEP budgeted investment Crude oil production outlook (IHS CERA) Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 25 Key findings • Peña Nieto Administration faces new reality: • Ever-strengthening Congress, increasing number of stake holders, stilladverse external conditions • PRI has a big chance to push for incremental changes in energy policy, but challenges will likely persist • Pros: PRI’s interest in deepening 2008 energy reform, PAN willing to support PRI’s promarket proposals, strong political fundamentals • Cons: PRI has historically supported the status quo, opposition may easily block constitutional reform, overloaded policy agenda • Reality check: Government revenue constraints call for urgent changes in fiscal and energy sectors • Campaign pledges largely depend on fiscal revenue flows • Fiscal reform would have a more visible short-term impact • First half of administration: Best suited for major changes in energy sector longer-term impact, adjustments may continue to be incremental • Major policy setbacks in early stage could put PRI’s agenda at odds Source: IHS CERA. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 26 Annex 27 Mexico’s 2012 general elections: Key facts President of the Republic Congress of the Union 50% 39.2% 40% PANAL 2% PANAL 1% 32.4% 26.1% 30% PAN 23% PAN 30% 20% 10% 2.4% 0% Enrique Enrique Peña Nieto Peña Nieto Andrés Manuel López Obrador Josefina Vázquez Mota PRI-PVEM 48% PRI-PVEM 47% Gabriel Quadri 15 State legislatures* PRD-PT-MC 22% 128 Senators PRD-PT-MC 27% 500 Deputies 6 State governments 1 Federal District’s chief of government 876 Municipalities** PRI 16 Boroughs or delegaciones (Federal District) Source: IHS CERA, Mexico’s Federal Electoral Institute. *Including the states of Campeche, Chiapas, Colima, México, Guerrero, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Morelos, Nuevo León, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí, Sonora, Tabasco, Yucatán, and the Federal District. **Plus 20 municipal councils elected in Campeche. © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. PRD PAN 28 For more information about this presentation or IHS in general, please contact Ricardo Falcón Ricardo.falcon@ihs.com © 2012 IHS No portion of this presentation may be reproduced, reused, or otherwise distributed in any form without prior written consent. 29