Ibn Erik
17-02-2010, 09:31
os maluquinhos do peakoil mito apontam vários tradicionais produtores que estão já na curva descendente de produção. vem muitas vezes à baila o caso do México.
só que o caso do México é simples: nacionalização do recursos petrolíferos. que provocu um colapso do investimento. tal como está a acontecer na Venezuela.
então, é natural que os poços que produzem menos não sejam melhorados ou substituidos por outros. é o que acontece no México.
só que o colapso da produção do México abriu os olhos às autoridades. podem ser chatas mas precisam das companhias internacionais para melhorarem a produção e as descobertas.
pois bem. já começaram a surgir os primeiros resultados do investimento em novos campos petrolíferos. com o tempo surgirão mais descobertas. basta procurar mais... fundo! :D:D:D
mais uma boa notícia:
New oil field in south of Gulf of Mexico could help rescue US industry
Mexico City, Feb 17 (DPA) A new oil field was identified in the south of the Gulf of Mexico that could help rescue the North American country’s lagging industry, according to the newspaper Reforma Tuesday.
The field is located off the coast of the Mexican state of Campeche, and contains an estimated 66 million tonnes (900 million barrels) of the fossil fuel. The discovery is one of the most important in the past decade, the state oil company Petroleos
Mexicanos (Pemex) said.
Exploitation of the field could begin in about two years, when up to 150,000 barrels a day could be pumped out. The new field could compensate for one-third of recent losses in Mexican production.
Mexico’s oil industry has been in crisis for years. The infrastructure operated by Pemex – which supplies 40 percent of government revenues – is getting old and wearing out.
Run as a state firm in a socialist system, a major part of its revenue is earmarked for the state budget, depriving Pemex of enough money to invest in maintaining and upgrading its equipment and carrying out new exploration.
In 2008, the Mexican Congress approved reform and allowed participation by private international firms – long rejected as a point of national pride.
Last week, an analyst at Standard & Poor’s projected that Pemex would pump 2.3 million barrels of oil a day in 2010, Bloomberg financial news service reported. The forecast would represent an 11.6 percent decline from 2009, according to Bloomberg calculations.
Mexico’s oil industry is in its seventh consecutive year of decline, Bloomberg reported.
Other analysts said in 2008 that the reserves of the one-time seventh-largest oil producer in the world would be dry by 2018.
http://calcuttatube.com/new-oil-field-in-south-of-gulf-of-mexico-could-help-rescue-us-industry/62066/
só que o caso do México é simples: nacionalização do recursos petrolíferos. que provocu um colapso do investimento. tal como está a acontecer na Venezuela.
então, é natural que os poços que produzem menos não sejam melhorados ou substituidos por outros. é o que acontece no México.
só que o colapso da produção do México abriu os olhos às autoridades. podem ser chatas mas precisam das companhias internacionais para melhorarem a produção e as descobertas.
pois bem. já começaram a surgir os primeiros resultados do investimento em novos campos petrolíferos. com o tempo surgirão mais descobertas. basta procurar mais... fundo! :D:D:D
mais uma boa notícia:
New oil field in south of Gulf of Mexico could help rescue US industry
Mexico City, Feb 17 (DPA) A new oil field was identified in the south of the Gulf of Mexico that could help rescue the North American country’s lagging industry, according to the newspaper Reforma Tuesday.
The field is located off the coast of the Mexican state of Campeche, and contains an estimated 66 million tonnes (900 million barrels) of the fossil fuel. The discovery is one of the most important in the past decade, the state oil company Petroleos
Mexicanos (Pemex) said.
Exploitation of the field could begin in about two years, when up to 150,000 barrels a day could be pumped out. The new field could compensate for one-third of recent losses in Mexican production.
Mexico’s oil industry has been in crisis for years. The infrastructure operated by Pemex – which supplies 40 percent of government revenues – is getting old and wearing out.
Run as a state firm in a socialist system, a major part of its revenue is earmarked for the state budget, depriving Pemex of enough money to invest in maintaining and upgrading its equipment and carrying out new exploration.
In 2008, the Mexican Congress approved reform and allowed participation by private international firms – long rejected as a point of national pride.
Last week, an analyst at Standard & Poor’s projected that Pemex would pump 2.3 million barrels of oil a day in 2010, Bloomberg financial news service reported. The forecast would represent an 11.6 percent decline from 2009, according to Bloomberg calculations.
Mexico’s oil industry is in its seventh consecutive year of decline, Bloomberg reported.
Other analysts said in 2008 that the reserves of the one-time seventh-largest oil producer in the world would be dry by 2018.
http://calcuttatube.com/new-oil-field-in-south-of-gulf-of-mexico-could-help-rescue-us-industry/62066/