Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Vista's $4.5 Billion Bet On Vaca Muerta Rewrites Argentina's Energy Map


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Vista Energy's new plan sounds technical at first glance: invest more than $4.5 billion to drill wells in Vaca Muerta and lift production by about 60 percent over the next few years.

But behind those numbers is a bigger story about whether Argentina is finally serious about turning its underground wealth into real, stable prosperity.

Vista is not a state giant but a privately run company, led by engineer-turned-executive Miguel Galuccio. It has quietly become Argentina 's second-largest shale producer and a major operator in Neuquén, the Patagonian province sitting on top of Vaca Muerta.

With this plan, Vista aims to push output to roughly 180,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2028 and around 200,000 by 2030, up from just over 100,000 today. That is the difference between a promising player and a serious regional force.

The financial logic is straightforward. If global Brent prices stay around $65–$70 per barrel, Vista expects to generate about $1.5 billion in free cash flow every year from 2026 to 2028.



Management also talks about roughly $8 billion in export revenues over the next three years and close to $2.8 billion in adjusted EBITDA by 2028.

The message to investors is clear: this is meant to be self-financed growth, not another Argentine story built on subsidies and creative accounting.

For Argentina, the stakes go far beyond corporate earnings. Every additional dollar of energy exports helps relieve chronic pressure on foreign reserves, supports a more stable exchange rate and gives future governments more room to manage the economy without constant crisis talks.

In Neuquén, the plan means more jobs in drilling, services, logistics and local infrastructure. For expats and foreign observers, Vista 's move is a useful litmus test.

If a mid-sized, profit-driven company is willing to commit billions on a long time horizon, it suggests that parts of Argentina's energy sector are starting to escape the stop-start cycle driven by political moods.

If the country can keep regulation predictable and contracts respected, Vaca Muerta may quietly shift Argentina from serial problem case to one of the hemisphere's most interesting energy stories.

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The Rio Times

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