Energy & Commodities · Oil
Key Facts
—The move. Mexico is sending a team from its state oil firm Pemex to Brazil next week to advance a deal with Petrobras.
—The timing. President Sheinbaum says she expects the agreement to be signed this month.
—The logic. Pemex wants Petrobras’s deep-water know-how, which it has never developed on its own.
—The decline. Mexican output has fallen from a peak of three-point-four million barrels a day to about one-point-six million.
—The burden. Pemex carries roughly eighty billion dollars of debt, the heaviest of any oil company in the world.
—The prize. For Petrobras, the deal extends its reach abroad just as its own pre-salt fields lift production.
The long-discussed Pemex Petrobras tie-up between Latin America’s two great state oil companies is about to move from talk to ink, as a Mexican delegation prepares to fly to Brazil and seal a partnership born of one country’s decline and the other’s expertise.
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What the Pemex Petrobras deal involves
Mexico’s president, Claudia Sheinbaum, confirmed this week that a team from Pemex, the country’s state-owned oil company, will travel to Brazil in the coming days. The goal is to finalise a cooperation agreement with Petrobras, Brazil’s state-controlled energy giant, which she expects to be signed this month.
The agreement is wide-ranging. It covers oil exploration and production, but also refining and petrochemicals, and the two sides are expected to begin with confidentiality accords and a memorandum of understanding before technical teams dig into joint studies.
The idea began with a phone call earlier this year, when Brazil’s President Lula pitched the partnership to Sheinbaum. It has since moved through a series of technical missions in both countries toward this month’s expected signing.
Why the Pemex Petrobras alliance makes sense
The deal is, at heart, a trade of expertise for opportunity. Petrobras has spent decades mastering how to drill in ultra-deep water, the skill that turned Brazil’s offshore pre-salt fields into a gusher and lifted its output by about a tenth last year.
Pemex has no such experience. Its ambitions sit in the Gulf of Mexico, in ageing fields like Cantarell that were once among the largest on earth but have steadily run down.
Petrobras also owns a technique, prized by Sheinbaum, for working out whether tired old fields still hold oil at greater depths. That is exactly the question Mexico needs answered if it is to slow its long production slide.
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Mexico’s Pemex Heads to Brazil to Seal a Deal With Petrobras
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A company in deep trouble
The urgency on the Mexican side is hard to overstate. Pemex once pumped a record three-point-four million barrels a day; today it manages around one-point-six million, as its shallow-water fields empty out.
Worse, it is the most indebted oil company in the world, carrying a load of roughly eighty billion dollars. It lacks the cash to fund the exploration needed to replace the reserves it is burning through, which is why a partner that brings know-how rather than a takeover bid is so appealing.
For Sheinbaum, the attraction is partly political. Teaming up with a fellow state company lets Mexico tap outside expertise without handing its oil to Western private majors, a line her government has been careful to hold.
What it means for investors
For Petrobras, whose shares trade in New York and São Paulo, the deal is a chance to expand its international footprint at a moment when it is already investing record sums at home. Stretching its deep-water skills into Mexico would help it find new reserves to sustain its own production well into the next decade.
For holders of Pemex debt, any credible plan to arrest the production decline is welcome news, though the company’s finances remain fragile. The market will watch closely to see whether next week’s visit produces a firm, signed commitment or merely another statement of intent.
More broadly, the pact is a sign of Latin America’s big state energy firms pooling resources rather than leaning on foreign companies. If it works, it could become a template for how the region develops its own oil, on its own terms.
Neither company is a stranger to the Gulf of Mexico. Petrobras already operates there through a joint venture with a US partner, while Pemex has worked alongside Australia’s Woodside on an ultra-deepwater project, so the two bring complementary footholds to the table.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Pemex Petrobras deal?
It is a cooperation agreement between Mexico’s state oil company Pemex and Brazil’s Petrobras, covering oil exploration, refining and petrochemicals. A Pemex team is visiting Brazil next week, and President Sheinbaum expects the deal to be signed this month.
Why does Pemex need Petrobras?
Pemex has no deep-water drilling experience and cannot afford the exploration needed to replace falling reserves. Petrobras has world-class deep-water expertise from Brazil’s offshore pre-salt fields, plus technology for finding oil deeper in mature fields.
How big is Pemex’s decline?
Mexican oil output has fallen from a peak of about three-point-four million barrels a day in 2004 to roughly one-point-six million today. Pemex also carries around eighty billion dollars of debt, the largest of any oil company in the world.
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