Mexico’s upstream Pemex gamble
The government refuses to expand E&P access despite the NOC’s high debt pile, falling crude output and growing gas import dependence
President Claudia Sheinbaum’s recent promise to revive Mexico’s flagging upstream, as well as achieve financial self-sufficiency for state oil and gas firm Pemex, is off to a shaky start. Liquid hydrocarbons output has slumped by almost 10% year-on-year in 2025 through to September, while the country’s rig count has collapsed by almost a half. In February, the Mexican government announced a new crude production target of 1.8m b/d, in addition to 5bcft/d for gas, both set for 2030. Over the same timeframe, Pemex has been tasked with cutting its debt by almost a quarter, reducing its debt pile from almost $100b today to $77b by the end of the decade. The problem is that those lofty ambitions
Also in this section
13 November 2025
The new federal government appears far more supportive of oil and gas than former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s climate-focused administration, but the prospects look better for the latter hydrocarbon
12 November 2025
The November 2025 issue of Petroleum Economist is out now!
10 November 2025
The Russian firm made a significant attempt to expand overseas over the past two decades but is now trying to divest its global operations
10 November 2025
OPEC+ has proven to be astute at bringing back oil production, but mysteries around Chinese buying, missing barrels and oil-on-water have left the group in wait-and-see mode






