Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Pemex's Debt Time Bomb Tests Mexico's New Government


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Pemex carries around $100 billion in financial debt plus tens of billions owed to suppliers, scaring off potential partners.
  • Mexico is offering 21“mixed contracts” to revive oil and gas output, but strict terms and late payments are cooling private interest.
  • How the government handles Pemex will shape Mexico's fiscal stability, investment climate and energy role in North America for years.

    Mexico's state oil giant Pemex is trying to reinvent itself just as its balance sheet and payment record are driving many investors to the exits.

    By late 2025, Pemex's financial debt was hovering near $100 billion, making it the most indebted oil company in the world.

    On top of that, unpaid bills to hundreds of suppliers have reached historic levels, with industry estimates and company data pointing to roughly $28 billion in outstanding obligations.

    Global service groups such as SLB, Baker Hughes and Halliburton, as well as flagship Mexican conglomerates like Grupo Carso and Grupo México, have all appeared on the list of creditors.



    Under pressure, the federal government raised about $12 billion on international markets to help roll over looming Pemex bonds and created a separate fund of roughly $13 billion to speed up payments.
    Pemex debts hit projects
    Suppliers report that invoices linked to 2025 projects are finally being cleared, but large chunks of 2024 debt remain in limbo, after months or even a year of delays.

    Those arrears are not just a bookkeeping problem. In oil hubs such as Ciudad del Carmen and Coatzacoalcos, cash-flow droughts have forced smaller contractors to cut jobs, shutter operations or seek arbitration.

    When rigs are idled and service firms walk away, Pemex 's own output suffers. Yet the company is promising the opposite: boosting crude production from around 1.6 million barrels per day to at least 1.7 million, and lifting gas output by about 40% by 2033.

    To get there, it is offering 21“mixed contracts” in shallow water, onshore and deepwater fields that could, on paper, add some 450,000 barrels per day by the early 2030s.

    The model, however, keeps Pemex firmly in the driver's seat. The company must hold at least 40% of each project, and cost recovery for private partners is capped at roughly 30% before profits, a structure rooted in the ruling party's rollback of earlier market-opening reforms.

    Senior officials quietly admit that, combined with Pemex's payment history, these terms may be too tight to attract the kind of serious capital and technology Mexico needs.

    The stakes go far beyond a single company. Pemex remains central to Mexico 's tax base and to global emerging-market bond indices.

    If the government insists on political control while relying on repeated bailouts, Mexico could find itself paying more for debt, importing more fuel and missing out on private investment that is flowing instead to countries with clearer rules and stronger respect for contracts.

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  • The Rio Times

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