Resources and power-Mexico

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Resources and power-Mexico

Minerals have been an important part of the economy throughout Mexico’s history. Mexico is the world’s leading producer of silver, which has long been the most valuable metal extracted there. The major mining area during the colonial period was the so-called Silver Belt, a region that extended from Guanajuato and Zacatecas in the Mesa Central to Chihuahua in the Mesa del Norte, with outposts such as San Luis Potosí farther east.

The Silver Belt is still Mexico’s primary source of nonfuel minerals, although now both industrial and precious minerals are sought. Silver is taken from the older centres of Guanajuato, Pachuca, and Zacatecas. Zinc, bauxite (the ore of aluminum), lead, gold, mercury, cadmium, and such trace minerals as antimony and manganese are also important. The once-rich copper deposits discovered in the late 1800s near Santa Rosalía in Baja California have been largely depleted. The country’s largest remaining deposits of copper are exploited in open-pit mines at Cananea and La Caridad in northern Sonora state. Iron ore deposits near Durango were first mined in the early 20th century.

Mexico ranks among the world’s most prolific petroleum-producing countries, and petroleum exports account for a large share of foreign-exchange earnings. The country has huge proven and potential reserves of petroleum and substantial reserves of natural gas. Mexico’s first commercially productive petroleum fields were discovered about 1900 off Tampico on the Gulf Coast. Shortly thereafter, foreign investors helped exploit additional fields farther south, near the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.

The oil industry was nationalized in 1938 with the creation of Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex), and the Mexican constitution stated that the oil industry must remain under state control. Latin America’s largest petroleum company, Pemex is a semiautonomous governmental agency charged with petroleum exploration, production, and marketing. It produces several hundred billion barrels of oil annually and operates major petroleum-producing fields in the Gulf of Mexico and along its coast, including the Poza Rica (near Tuxpan), the Tampico-Misantla basin, and various sites in Chiapas and Tabasco. Major natural gas fields are located near Reynosa in northeastern Mexico, near Veracruz, and in the Chiapas-Tabasco region of the Gulf of Mexico coast.

In 2008, however, because of declining oil production—which peaked in 2004—the Mexican Congress passed a series of controversial energy reforms that included provisions to allow private investment in Pemex for the first time since 1938. Among the agreements to emerge from those reforms was the 2012 U.S.-Mexico Transboundary Hydrocarbons Agreement, which allowed for prospecting along maritime borders between the two countries and facilitated further opportunities for partnership.

In 2013 the government announced further reforms of the national energy policy. Growing imports of gasoline and other refined products, along with the federal government’s heavy budgetary dependence on petroleum royalties and taxes, led the administration of President Enrique Peña Nieto to seek investment from foreign oil companies that possessed the capital and technology necessary to exploit Mexico’s deep-sea reserves and revitalize the industry. The government therefore proposed—and won congressional approval of—amendments to those articles of the constitution that gave Pemex exclusive control over exploration, production, refining, storage, and distribution of oil, natural gas, and basic petrochemicals. The amendents further broadened private investment opportunities. Leftists favouring the maintenance of a more strictly nationalist policy protested the new policy and stalled the passage of secondary laws intended to establish a taxation model in 2014.

A system of oil and natural gas pipelines has been constructed to move these products to major cities in the Mesa Central and to the U.S. border, where they formerly linked up with pipelines in the United States. Large oil refineries have been built near the Gulf of Mexico at Minatitlán and Reynosa to augment the older productive capacity of those at Ciudad Madero near Tampico. Additional refineries are located at Salamanca, Tula and Atzcapotzalco near Mexico City, Poza Rica, and Salina Cruz. Sulfur is found in conjunction with petroleum in many of the Gulf fields and is used in the manufacture of a wide variety of products. Petrochemical plants have been built in Veracruz state at Coatzacoalcos, the major export centre for sulfur products, and at Ciudad Pemex in Tabasco. Both are located in formerly unpopulated rainforest regions. A number of petrochemical sites are also found near refineries in the Mesa Central.

Thermal power plants, fired mainly by oil and natural gas, generate about three-fourths of Mexico’s electricity. Both nuclear power and renewable resources (wind, solar, and biomass) combined account for about one-tenth of the country’s electric power, and hydroelectric complexes provide about one-sixth of the country’s needs. In the 1940s and ’50s, hydroelectric power was seen as vital for the country. Because of their proximity to major population clusters, most of the early projects were located on the streams exiting the eastern and southern escarpments of the Mesa Central. Better transmission technologies subsequently permitted hydroelectric complexes to be located farther away, such as the Malpaso Project on the Grijalva River on the margins of the Chiapas Highlands.