Mexico’s president pushes nationalist agenda after Texas gas disruption

Amy Stillman and Sergio Chapa March 26, 2021
Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador

MEXICO CITY (Bloomberg) --The deep freeze across the central U.S. last month didn't just darken 4 million homes in Texas. It also left millions of people across the border in Mexico in the dark for days, disrupted water supplies, forced schools and businesses to shut, and knocked out service to about 800 manufacturing facilities that depend on U.S. shale gas for energy.

Since then, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has turned the crisis into a rallying cry for more energy independence, weaponizing it to advance a nationalist agenda that has implications beyond natural gas imports and threatens tens of billions of dollars of investments in renewable energy by U.S., Canadian and European energy companies. On a large screen behind his press-briefing podium, he called up the image of a recent Wall Street Journal article showing how the power-market deregulation in Texas cost utility customers billions of dollars.

“When they had the issue of the freeze in Texas, it became clear that the energy policy in place in that state and other states in the American union doesn’t work well,’’ the 67-year-old president, widely known as AMLO, told reporters last month as he pointed to the article, which he also cited in other occasions.  “They paid an extra $28 billion in Texas because of the privatization of the electricity industry.”

The jabs at Texas provided fresh fodder for AMLO’s long-standing crusade to return the country’s electricity to the hands of the state in a throwback to decades of monopoly that left old power plants in bad shape and unable to meet growing electricity demand. His policies are putting him on a collision course with the U.S. and other nations that worry about assets held by NextEra Energy Inc., Sempra Energy, Canadian Solar Inc., Spain’s Iberdrola SA and Italy’s Enel SpA. While the president claims that private-sector investors are ransacking Mexico’s energy riches, some critics say that all he has achieved is to stall power generation projects that would actually help Mexico cut gas purchases from north of the border.

The government has “this fantasy that they can reduce their use of natural gas,” said Rosanety Barrios, an independent energy analyst and former energy ministry official in the previous administration of Enrique Pena Nieto. “We don’t have a strategy to reduce the risk of import dependency, that’s the reality.”

The president argues that the state can make the country more energy-independent by building new hydro dams and other power plants. It’s hard to fathom, though, how the cash-strapped national utility Comision Federal de Electricidad and oil producer Petroleos Mexicanos could at the same time reduce Mexico’s reliance on gas from Texas, sideline internationally owned solar and wind projects, and do all that without the help of private enterprise and foreign capital. CFE struggles to maintain its existing power plants, and Pemex can’t produce gas as cheap as Texas does, so it focuses almost entirely on crude.

Energized by public outrage over last month’s outages that he blames on the previous administration’s policies, his piecemeal moves to give the state more control over the electricity market are gaining some traction.

This month, the president managed to pass a bill that gives CFE priority over solar and wind plants when selling electricity on the grid. The law is now stuck in a court battle, and that’s just prodding him further: He has pledged to amend the constitution to dial back on the reforms that opened up the country’s energy industry to the private sector in 2013 and 2014.

 “I will send an initiative to reform the constitution, because I cannot be an accessory to theft, robbery, I cannot accept that individuals harm the public treasury,'' AMLO said last week.

In practice, Mexico’s economy has continued to become increasingly reliant on the U.S. under AMLO, who rose to power in 2018 on pledges to reduce that dependence.  Rising exports to the northern neighbor and money sent home by Mexican expats have been a major boost to the economy during the pandemic. Meanwhile, gas imports from the U.S. have nearly tripled in five years to about 6.5 billion cubic feet a day.

Instead of helping Mexico diversify its electricity generation, his policies have mostly alienated the renewable energy developers that came to the country following the past administration’s reforms and are already producing about a 10th of the country’s electricity. They’ve invested almost $30 billion in renewables and energy storage over the past decade, and potential power generation projects over the next 30 years could bring roughly $150 billion more, according to BloombergNEF.

But AMLO is putting all that in limbo. His government has sought to favor the state utility in the power market even before this month’s contentious bill. About 200 energy projects have been stalled, while competitive bidding rounds for new energy investments have been suspended.

Jaguar E&P, a Mexican upstart that has half of the privately operated onshore gas fields in the country, is hoping that private explorers will be able to thrive alongside the two state energy companies and help the country reduce dependence on imports.

“What happened in February highlights the risk that we have associated not just with relying on gas coming from the U.S. but specifically gas coming from one state,” Jaguar Chief Executive Officer Warren Levy said in an interview. “You combine the very heavy import dependency, lack of storage capacity, lack of domestic supply, and what you get is that when you have a shortfall of gas, there’s a very high risk for the Mexican economy.”

Even if AMLO’s approach can’t realistically bring Mexico closer to energy self-sufficiency, it gets votes. After four years of a Donald Trump presidency that wasn’t very friendly towards his country, AMLO’s combination of charisma and tough nationalistic talk has helped him sustain high levels of popularity. And with over 60% of Mexico’s electricity generation relying on gas that comes mostly from north of the border, it’s also easy to see how his supporters are willing to overlook flaws in his policies in the name of more independence.

It also didn’t help that Texas Governor Greg Abbott, at the height of the crisis on Feb. 17,  banned sales of power and gas to customers outside the state. The move was bound to have serious implications to Mexico, as Javier Lopez Ramos, the chief executive officer of Pemex’s gas-trading unit, pointed out in a letter to the Texas energy regulator that same day.

“The loss of export volumes from Texas cannot readily be offset with Mexican production, such that human deprivation will almost certainly result,’’ he said in the letter.

While Mexico’s outages weren’t as bad as in Texas, where 57 people died because of the freeze, grid operator Cenace announced rolling blackouts that lasted for three days, with as many as 4.7 million customers losing electricity at some point. The northern states of Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas were the worst hit. Manufacturing and export firms lost about $200 per hour during the outages, according to Luis Manuel Hernandez, the president of the National Council of the Maquiladora and Export Manufacturing Industry. But he’s not blaming the U.S.

“If the government had anticipated the problem, we wouldn’t have had three days without electricity,” he said over the phone from Tijuana.

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