Search This Blog

September 9, 2014

#Mexico will see significant growth from the coming huge private investment in #energy #MasterEnergy

Total private investment in energy may reach $161bn between 2014 and 2020.

Mexico counting on huge private investment in energy

Beyondbrics - FT.com

Mexico’s energy reform is all about boosting investment and thus production. But the million dollar question is: just how much investment will flood in, and to what type of resource, when fields are put on the block starting from next year?
Ernesto Marcos, a former CFO of Pemex, the Mexican state company, has hazarded what looks like the first comprehensive guess.
His estimates, which Franklin Templeton Investments publishes in a note to clients, reckon that Mexico can count on $29bn in private investment in energy in 2018, the end of the administration of Enrique Peña Nieto, equivalent to 1.9 per cent of GDP. In 2020, the investment total could be $50bn, or 3 per cent of GDP, he reckons. Total private investment in energy may reach $161bn between 2014 and 2020.
How will the investment be broken down per sector? Mexico, after all, has a wealth of opportunities, including shale plays that are the geological continuation of US formations, and deep-water riches. But shale faces significant challenges including lack of water and infrastructure, and being located in areas prone to drug cartel violence that will add security concerns. Hydrocarbons in the depths of the Gulf of Mexico will take big investment and many years to extract.
Shale, not unsurprisingly, is expected to get off to a slow start with investment of $1bn next year. But it could gather pace speedily to $3bn in 2017, $6bn in 2018, $9bn in 2019 and $12bn in 2020, when Marcos’ consultancy, Marcos & Asociados, expects it to account for more than a fifth of all private energy investment in Mexico.
Investment in deep-water prospects is also expected to hit $6bn by the end of this administration, increasing to $9bn by 2020. The slightly slower pace underscores how much of a long-term investment deep-water is.
Most investment next year is likely in mature fields and gas pipelines. Gas processing is expected to take off from 2018, while mature fields and refinery modernisations will attract some $6bn each in 2020, according to the forecast.
Here are Marcos & Asociados’ estimates in full:

Source: Franklin Templeton Investments
So with Mexico’s economy set to grow still below initial expectations – the government is forecasting 3.7 per cent for next year – just how much will all this hydrocarbons investment boost the economy?
Significantly, Franklin Templeton says:
We still do not have a macroeconomic model that will translate this additional investment into growth for the Mexican economy. However, similar experiences of liberalising the energy sector in Brazil and Colombia indicate a multiplier effect from the additional investment of at least 1:1 on GDP.
We also have to take into account that these estmates do not include additional investment from the opening up of the electricity sector. This implies that an estimate of a level of growth of another 2 per cent of GDP from 2018 onwards ould be reasonable.
Of course, Pemex, the state oil company that is losing its monopoly, will continue to be a major player: Its investment budget from 2014-2020 alone is $209bn. Put that together with private investment and Mexico’s hydrocarbons sector is expected to suck in a whopping $370bn by 2020.
Fasten your seatbelts then. Mexico’s energy sector looks like being an exciting ride.

September 3, 2014

Top 50 #Gold mines contain more than 33.5% of the world’s gold #Infographic

What is the Cost of Mining Gold?



The MasterMetals Blog
@MasterMetals

August 15, 2014

#MasterEnergy: #Africa is "resource rich but modern #energy poor" @TheEIU_Energy

"Roughly 60% of Africans lack access to electricity"

Despite Africa's prodigious resources, many Africans live in energy poverty. Massive investments will be needed to end it.

Africa has rich energy resources, with 8% of the world's proven oil and natural-gas reserves. This is without considering alternative sources such as hydropower (generated using the waters of the Nile River, for example) or its solar potential (think of the deserts of North Africa). Yet roughly 60% of Africans lack access to electricity; about 70% have little choice but to use health-harming firewood or other biomass for cooking. As the International Energy Agency (IEA) observes, Africa is "resource rich but modern energy poor".
One problem is the uneven distribution of Africa's resources. Eighty-five percent of proven oil reserves lie in just a few countries: Algeria, Libya, Nigeria and Angola. Over 90% of Africa's gas is found in Algeria, Libya, Nigeria and Egypt. Underinvestment is another barrier. The IEA estimates US$385bn would be needed to provide universal access to electricity in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2030.
Given the constraints, how quickly will African energy demand grow? With oil production concentrated among a few big exporters, most states will have to turn to imports. African oil consumption will expand by little more than 1% per year until 2035, according to the IEA. Gas is a different story. Large new discoveries in Mozambique and Tanzania (see infographic; click here for the full-size version) will help the continent's gas production to double by 2035. This new output will go towards supplying Asia's hunger for liquefied natural gas (LNG). But Africa's own gas consumption will also expand robustly, growing at 2.6% per year as demand from the electricity sector picks up.
Still, if all Africans are to gain access to a reliable stream of electricity, attracting greater investments will be vital—and not just in extending conventional grid infrastructure. Building off-grid power plants (wind and solar farms, for instance) and improving energy efficiency are also important aims. Eventually, an electricity trading system will be needed so that energy-rich states can profit from supplying their neighbours.
Working in Africa's favour are not only humanitarian concerns but—thanks to rapidly ascending economies in parts of the continent—the profit motive. On August 6th, Sweden, the World Bank, and the US government and US corporations announced billions of dollars of new investment, much of it for the energy sector under the US's Power Africa scheme. Much more will be needed.

Read the article online at the The Economist Intelligence Unit @TheEIU_Energy here: http://www.eiu.com/industry/article/922160876/africa-resource-rich-energy-poor---infographic/2014-08-11

Click here to view the infographic, published as part of a programme sponsored by GE.  


______________________________
MasterMetals

ShareThis

MasterMetals’ Tweets