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News
UserPic Kokel, Nicolas
Pemex
2025/05/15 08:29 AM
Pemex’s 2024: A Year of Record Losses, Mounting Debt, and Elusive Production Targets. View Main Message




Mexico, 29 April 2025 -- Mexico’s state-owned energy giant Pemex closed 2024 with a staggering net loss of $30.3 billion, a dramatic reversal from its modest $398 million profit in 2023, as plummeting crude production, refining inefficiencies, and soaring debt obligations crippled its financial health. The results, detailed in company filings and analyst reports, underscore deepening challenges for a firm critical to Mexico’s economy but increasingly seen as a liability in global energy markets.

Financial Freefall and Debt Crisis

Pemex’s revenue fell 2.4% in 2024, driven by declining oil exports and weaker international crude prices. The company’s refining segment, despite processing 905,607 barrels per day-its highest volume since 2016-remained a drag, operating at just 46% of capacity. The much-touted Olmeca refinery, a $24 billion project initially promised to revolutionize domestic fuel production, processed a meager 23,275 barrels per day on average, barely 6.8% of its 340,000-barrel capacity.

Debt, however, remains Pemex’s most pressing issue. By year-end 2024, liabilities reached $97.6 billion, rising to $101.1 billion by March 2025. Government bailouts, including an 80 billion peso ($3.9 billion) infusion in early 2025, have done little to stabilize finances. Fitch Ratings affirmed Pemex’s ‘B+’ credit rating in December 2024 but warned that interest payments alone-estimated at $8.3 billion annually-consume over half its operating cash flow.

Production Woes and Leadership Turbulence

Crude and condensate output averaged 1.67 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2024, far below the government’s 1.8 million bpd target. Aging fields and delayed drilling projects exacerbated the decline, with Q1 2025 production dropping 11.3% year-on-year to 1.5 million bpd. Pemex’s inability to reverse this trend has raised doubts about President Claudia Sheinbaum’s pledge to achieve energy self-sufficiency by 2030.

Leadership instability further complicates recovery efforts. In May 2025, Pemex abruptly reinstated Ángel Cid Munguía as head of exploration and production after his predecessor, Gustavo Martínez, resigned unexpectedly. The shuffle reflects mounting pressure to address operational setbacks, including a 31% reduction in drilling activity
compared to 2023.

Strategic Gambles and Long-Term Risks

Pemex’s $109.4 billion five-year investment plan, announced in February 2025, aims to revive production and modernize infrastructure. Yet skepticism abounds. The company owes suppliers $19.9 billion, jeopardizing partnerships essential for new projects. Meanwhile, its refineries—burdened by decades of underinvestment—remain reliant on imported feedstock, costing Mexico $18 billion annually in fuel imports.

The Olmeca refinery epitomizes these struggles. Despite claims of “progress,” the facility operated sporadically in 2024, with December output at just 13% of capacity. Analysts warn that without significant operational overhauls, Pemex’s refining ambitions will remain unmet, perpetuating reliance on foreign gasoline and diesel.

Outlook: A Precarious Balance

Pemex’s survival hinges on continued government support and successful debt management. While officials tout joint ventures with private firms-offering at least 40% stakes to attract capital-investors confidence remains fragile. The firm’s reliance on volatile oil prices and political favoritism leaves it vulnerable to external shocks.

As Mexico grapples with Pemex’s systemic issues, 2025 looms as a pivotal year. Will the energy titan stabilize its finances and production, or will it become a cautionary tale of resource nationalism gone awry? For now, the scales tip perilously toward the latter.

#pemex  #refineryutilization  #refining  #refinery  #olmeca  #mexico  #oilrefinery 

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