Malaysia's Petronas among Mexico certified bidders for Dec deep water oil auctions


Petronas could emerge with rival bids

MEXICO CITY: Mexico's oil regulator announced on Monday a final list of 17 oil companies representing a dozen countries that have pre-qualified to bid on the country's first-ever deep water oil auctions, set for Dec. 5.

The highly anticipated tenders include an auction to pick a partner for Mexican national oil company Pemex to develop its promising Trion field, as well as 10 separate deep water fields, including four clustered around Trion just south of Mexico's maritime border with the United States.

All the fields are in the country's territorial waters in the Gulf of Mexico, in the Perdido Fold Belt and the Salina basin along the southern rim of the Gulf.

The pre-qualified companies constitute a total of 15 bidders, eight of which successfully sought to pre-qualify as individual operators while seven consortia did so as well.

The pre-qualified individual bidders are Australia's BHP Billiton, Britain's BP, China's CNOOC, the United States' ExxonMobil, Malaysia's Petronas , Mexico's Pemex, Norway's Statoil and France's Total.

The seven consortia are Atlantic Rim and Royal Dutch Shell ; Eni and Lukoil; Murphy, Ophir , Petronas unit PC Carigali and Sierra Offshore Exploration; PC Carigali and Sierra; Statoil, BP and Total; Total and ExxonMobil; and Chevron along with Pemex and Inpex Corp.

The later consortium marks the first time Pemex has sought to tie up with another oil company in the hopes of jointly developing an exploration and production project.

Juan Carlos Zepeda, president of the oil regulator known as the CNH, said it will not be known until Dec. 5 whether the pre-qualified firms will bid on Trion or the other deep water blocks up for grabs.

"It's a large number of bidders," said Zepeda.

"We have companies that are competing as individuals and as consortia, and some of them are even participating in more than one consortium," he said, adding that about half of Mexico's prospective oil resources are located in the Gulf's deep waters.

Zepeda emphasized that companies are barred from bidding more than once on the same project.

The auctions will mark the fourth phase of the so-called Round One tender, a major part of an energy reform launched in 2013 that ended the decades-long monopoly enjoyed by Pemex and aims to reverse a dozen years of declining crude output. - Reuters

Play, subscribe and stand a chance to win prizes worth over RM39,000! T&C applies.

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

RM 11.12/month

Billed as RM 11.12 for the 1st month, RM 13.90 thereafter.

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 9.87/month

Billed as RM 118.40 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
Petronas , Mexico , Malaysia , tenders , certifies , oil , production , price , bidders ,

Next In Business News

'Military is raring to go': Trump says he does not want to extend ceasefire with Iran
Hong Kong bluechips Cathay, MTR tap record-hot Hong Kong dollar bond market
Govt to roll out B15 biodiesel as over 70% of blending depots ready
Ringgit strengthens against US dollar and major currencies
Cape EMS expands into AI, EV and energy interconnect solutions
Silver Ridge unit secures construction contract
Anwar: Banking institutions must act as strategic partners to sustain�domestic economy
World's top condom maker Karex to raise prices sharply as Iran war strains supply chain
Malaysia remains resilient, thanks to focus on fiscal discipline, economic reform
FBM KLCI extends gains as investors eye US-Iran peace talks

Others Also Read