13 December 2013 | 12:01

Mexico's Congress approves historic oil reform

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Mexican congressmen applaud after Mexico Congress approves the biggest oil sector shake-up in the lower house in Mexico City December 12, 2013. ©Reuters/Henry Romero Mexican congressmen applaud after Mexico Congress approves the biggest oil sector shake-up in the lower house in Mexico City December 12, 2013. ©Reuters/Henry Romero

Mexico's Congress approved historic energy reform Thursday aimed at luring foreign oil firms back into the country and ending the state's 75-year-old monopoly following a heated debate, AFP reports. After a marathon session that lasted nearly 24 hours, the lower house voted 353 to 134 for the legislation championed by President Enrique Pena Nieto, one day after it passed the Senate. Supporters pumped their fists and chanted "Mexico!" after the vote, while leftist opponents shouted "traitors" following a debate during which a couple of lawmakers scuffled and another stripped down to his underwear in discontent. Pena Nieto welcomed the vote on a "fundamental transformation that will drive economic growth and generate jobs in our country." The constitutional changes must now be approved by a majority of 32 state legislatures, with most expected to give their backing. The legislation is the centerpiece of Pena Nieto's reform agenda, which has led to overhauls of education, tax collection, banking and telecommunications to boost Latin America's second biggest economy. But opening the oil and gas industry to private investment is a highly sensitive issue in Mexico, where many look back with pride at the expulsion of foreign companies by president Lazaro Cardenas in 1938. Supporters insist that state-run energy firm Pemex urgently needs outside help to reverse a downward trend in production, build refineries and drill for shale gas and deep-water oil deposits. The left, led by the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), had called for a referendum, arguing that the reform amounts to a privatization of the industry and a gift to US companies. Pena Nieto's centrist Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) joined forces with the conservative opposition National Action Party (PAN) to draft the bill. "Transforming our energy sector is urgent," said PAN deputy Juan Bueno Torio. Oil output has dropped from 3.4 million barrels per day in 2004 to 2.5 million today, and Mexico imports half of the gasoline it consumes. The reform would let private firms explore and extract oil and gas, as well as share profits, production and risk with Pemex, ending a ban cemented in Mexico's constitution. The reform, however, says the oil will remain the property of the country. Although it falls short of more controversial concessions, analysts say the reform's contracts and license schemes are more ambitious than Pena Nieto's original proposal, which had called for profit-sharing deals. Pete Garcia, executive director of the Gulf Goast chapter of the United States-Mexico Chamber of Commerce, said energy firms will meet in Texas next month to discuss the reform's potential. "It is the hot topic," Garcia told AFP. "Mexico has such vast reserves that have not been tapped that (the reform) would only be positive for our communities in Houston," he said, referring to the Texas energy hub. But Garcia and analysts warned it would take time for the reform to bear fruit. "It will take several years for the actual refineries that need to be built in Mexico to be actually built. So that means Mexico will still have to send crude to be refined here," he said. Allowing foreign oil companies back to Mexico stirred passions in Congress. Lawmakers voted one by one by voice following a rowdy session held in a crammed auditorium because two-dozen leftist lawmakers had padlocked themselves inside the 500-seat chamber of deputies. The vote capped a marathon debate in which the majority rejected a series of objections raised by the left, which was angry that the reform was fast-tracked by skipping committees. The session took an unusual turn when PRD deputy Antonio Garcia Conejo took to the podium before dawn and removed his socks, suit and tie. Standing in his black underwear, he said supporters of the reform "stripped down the nation." Two other lawmakers, leftist Karen Quiroga and PRI deputy Landy Berzunza, scuffled during the session, leaving Berzunza with a scratched retina. The vote broke an unprecedented accord between the PRI, PAN and PRD that had led to the passage of political, education, fiscal, telecoms and banking reforms. "The Pact for Mexico is dead," PRD president Jesus Zambrano told reporters. He said his party will send a letter to international oil companies, warning them that the left will demand a referendum in 2015 to repeal the reform.


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Mexico's Congress approved historic energy reform Thursday aimed at luring foreign oil firms back into the country and ending the state's 75-year-old monopoly following a heated debate, AFP reports. After a marathon session that lasted nearly 24 hours, the lower house voted 353 to 134 for the legislation championed by President Enrique Pena Nieto, one day after it passed the Senate. Supporters pumped their fists and chanted "Mexico!" after the vote, while leftist opponents shouted "traitors" following a debate during which a couple of lawmakers scuffled and another stripped down to his underwear in discontent. Pena Nieto welcomed the vote on a "fundamental transformation that will drive economic growth and generate jobs in our country." The constitutional changes must now be approved by a majority of 32 state legislatures, with most expected to give their backing. The legislation is the centerpiece of Pena Nieto's reform agenda, which has led to overhauls of education, tax collection, banking and telecommunications to boost Latin America's second biggest economy. But opening the oil and gas industry to private investment is a highly sensitive issue in Mexico, where many look back with pride at the expulsion of foreign companies by president Lazaro Cardenas in 1938. Supporters insist that state-run energy firm Pemex urgently needs outside help to reverse a downward trend in production, build refineries and drill for shale gas and deep-water oil deposits. The left, led by the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD), had called for a referendum, arguing that the reform amounts to a privatization of the industry and a gift to US companies. Pena Nieto's centrist Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) joined forces with the conservative opposition National Action Party (PAN) to draft the bill. "Transforming our energy sector is urgent," said PAN deputy Juan Bueno Torio. Oil output has dropped from 3.4 million barrels per day in 2004 to 2.5 million today, and Mexico imports half of the gasoline it consumes. The reform would let private firms explore and extract oil and gas, as well as share profits, production and risk with Pemex, ending a ban cemented in Mexico's constitution. The reform, however, says the oil will remain the property of the country. Although it falls short of more controversial concessions, analysts say the reform's contracts and license schemes are more ambitious than Pena Nieto's original proposal, which had called for profit-sharing deals. Pete Garcia, executive director of the Gulf Goast chapter of the United States-Mexico Chamber of Commerce, said energy firms will meet in Texas next month to discuss the reform's potential. "It is the hot topic," Garcia told AFP. "Mexico has such vast reserves that have not been tapped that (the reform) would only be positive for our communities in Houston," he said, referring to the Texas energy hub. But Garcia and analysts warned it would take time for the reform to bear fruit. "It will take several years for the actual refineries that need to be built in Mexico to be actually built. So that means Mexico will still have to send crude to be refined here," he said. Allowing foreign oil companies back to Mexico stirred passions in Congress. Lawmakers voted one by one by voice following a rowdy session held in a crammed auditorium because two-dozen leftist lawmakers had padlocked themselves inside the 500-seat chamber of deputies. The vote capped a marathon debate in which the majority rejected a series of objections raised by the left, which was angry that the reform was fast-tracked by skipping committees. The session took an unusual turn when PRD deputy Antonio Garcia Conejo took to the podium before dawn and removed his socks, suit and tie. Standing in his black underwear, he said supporters of the reform "stripped down the nation." Two other lawmakers, leftist Karen Quiroga and PRI deputy Landy Berzunza, scuffled during the session, leaving Berzunza with a scratched retina. The vote broke an unprecedented accord between the PRI, PAN and PRD that had led to the passage of political, education, fiscal, telecoms and banking reforms. "The Pact for Mexico is dead," PRD president Jesus Zambrano told reporters. He said his party will send a letter to international oil companies, warning them that the left will demand a referendum in 2015 to repeal the reform.
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