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(WO) — Nationwide oil corporations are typically extra bloated and fewer environment friendly than their private-sector counterparts. But Petroleos Mexicanos, with a workforce of about 128,000, stands out even amongst its state-owned friends. 

The quantity of crude Pemex pumps per worker has slipped to simply underneath 14 bpd, lower than every other Latin American state producer besides Petroleos de Venezuela. Brazil’s state oil firm pumps almost 48 bpd per worker. Colombia’s cranks out about 27. On the opposite facet of the globe, Saudi Aramco — with a equally sized workforce to Pemex — pumps greater than 92.

It factors to an enormous problem for brand new Chief Govt Officer Victor Rodriguez, tapped by President Claudia Sheinbaum to rescue the world’s most indebted main oil producer. And the implications lengthen past simply the corporate and its bondholders. Pemex’s funds are deeply intertwined with Mexico itself, which implies Sheinbaum’s efforts to battle crime, develop the financial system and advance the remainder of her agenda will hinge, partly, on fixing Pemex.

“Pemex wants somebody to come back in with a giant broom to wash issues up, however there’s no energy to take action,” stated Luis Maizel, a longtime Pemex bondholder and senior managing director at LM Capital Group in San Diego. “You want any person who’s a superb negotiator and a superb politician, and in that regard Victor Rodriguez is actually an unknown.”

Except for a bloated workforce, the corporate’s woes embrace $100 billion in debt, drilling platforms that go away large oil deposits within the floor, abysmal information on security and the atmosphere and refineries that bleed money. Pemex declined to remark for this story.

Former President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador dumped as much as $80 billion into the corporate by way of capital injections and tax breaks over his six-year time period. However little, if something, improved, underscoring simply how a lot of a drag Pemex’s inefficiency has develop into on the nation’s backside line. 

Pemex’s issues make it all of the tougher for Sheinbaum, who’s inheriting the widest public deficit in 40 years, to maintain her guarantees to slash the shortfall and proceed monetary help for the state oil firm.

Chief among the many new CEO’s challenges can be slimming down its workforce, which hasn’t shrunk amid the corporate’s two-decade slide in manufacturing. 

Highly effective unions have largely stored Pemex from initiating mass layoffs. Over 80% of staff are unionized, in accordance with firm paperwork, and rising pension funds are including to its monetary burden.

There’s additionally been a raft of security issues and manufacturing losses. A large explosion at an offshore nicely final yr left two lifeless and a whole bunch of hundreds of barrels misplaced after a facility went offline for months. 

That was just one accident in a string of lethal mishaps, together with a current one at a Texas refinery. The corporate had 9 employee fatalities in 2022, in accordance with the newest information obtainable to Bloomberg. There have been 12 the yr earlier than, together with 5 folks killed in an offshore platform accident. Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp., which each produce extra crude, recorded two deaths every final yr, the information present.

Pemex’s monetary troubles stay its overriding concern. Three months in the past, the corporate posted its worst loss because the begin of the pandemic. It’s scheduled to launch its third-quarter earnings on Tuesday. As of the second quarter, Pemex owed a complete of $99.4 billion to collectors. 

Given fee delays, “Pemex simply pays 30% to 40% above market charges for all the pieces,” stated John Padilla, managing director of IPD Latin America, an vitality consultancy. “It’s only one other thing they need to cease the bleeding on.”

Because of growing old gear, Pemex leaves the vast majority of its oil reserves within the floor. For each 100 barrels it pumps within the Gulf of Mexico, it leaves about 77 behind whereas its rivals on common go away 40 to 50, in accordance with information from upstream consultancy Welligence. 

Pemex’s manufacturing has been sliding for years. It produces about 1.8 million barrels of crude and condensates per day, round half its peak 20 years in the past. In a bid to reverse the decline, AMLO, as the previous president is understood, proposed a $13.8 billion plan to spice up manufacturing at 23 new wells. 

Whereas a couple of of these helped marginally enhance output, the vast majority of the trouble was a flop, Welligence co-founder Pablo Medina stated. “Pemex is in a troublesome state of affairs as a result of its portfolio of belongings could be very mature — and only some of them actually transfer the needle.”

Pemex’s Xikin offshore area close to Tabasco state, for instance, was estimated to carry round 190 million recoverable barrels in 2018. Since then, the corporate has slashed its estimate for the way a lot it might probably pump from that area by 60%, to simply 76 million barrels, in accordance with information from Mexico’s nationwide hydrocarbon regulator.

It’s not simply in exploration and manufacturing that inefficiency is rampant. The corporate’s growing old refineries — most of which had been constructed within the Twenties and Nineteen Thirties — are bleeding money.

“You possibly can’t anticipate a 100-year-old refinery to carry out like a 20-year-old refinery,” stated Adriana Eraso, a Fitch Rankings analyst in New York. “The primary factor the brand new administration must do is minimize its variety of refineries.”

Whereas the typical revenue margin for refiners throughout Latin American is $2 to $5 per barrel, Pemex’s refining enterprise prices the corporate about $9 in misplaced earnings for each barrel produced on an annualized foundation, in accordance with Eraso.

In the meantime, the previous president’s bid to rescue Pemex’s downstream enterprise by constructing a brand new flagship Gulf Coast refinery has all however imploded. The Dos Bocas facility is greater than three years delayed and $11 billion over funds. 

Regardless of AMLO’s repeated guarantees that Mexico would produce all of the gas it consumes by the top of his time period, it nonetheless imports greater than half the gasoline it makes use of, in accordance with Mexico Metropolis-based consultancy EMPRA. Dos Bocas solely processed crude at 25% of its 340,000 bpd whole capability in August, processed zero barrels within the first half of October due to technical points, and went offline completely final Monday.

The state firm’s many woes pose a hurdle for Rodriguez and Sheinbaum, who’ve steered broadening Pemex’s scope to incorporate new ventures in renewables and lithium exploration. Analysts say it ought to do the other: slim down and give attention to the onshore and shallow water drilling it does finest. Every thing else, they argue, needs to be outsourced or offloaded.

“Pemex doesn’t have the money to be spending on creating its effectivity,” Medina stated. “There’s a lot hidden worth that may be extracted by working with the personal sector.”




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