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Mexico Power Report Q2 2011

Business Monitor International, April 2011, Pages: 43


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Business Monitor International's Mexico Power Report provides industry professionals and strategists, corporate analysts, power associations, government departments and regulatory bodies with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on Mexico's power industry.

The newly published Mexico Power Report from BMI forecasts that the country will account for 20.66% of Latin America regional power generation by 2015, with a small power surplus available for export to the US, even after system losses etc. BMI’s Latin America power generation assumption for 2010 is 1,212 terawatt hours (TWh), an increase of 5.39% over the previous year. We are forecasting a rise in regional generation to 1,438TWh by 2015, representing an increase of 14.44% during 2011-2015. Latin American thermal power generation in 2010 is assumed by BMI to have been 449TWh, accounting for 37.0% of the total electricity supplied in the region. Our forecast for 2015 is 496TWh, implying 8.52% growth during 2011-2015, trimming the market share of thermal generation to 34.5% thanks to environmental concerns that are promoting renewables, hydro-electricity and nuclear power. Mexico’s 2010 thermal generation will have been an estimated 217TWh, representing 48.20% of the regional total. By 2015, it is expected to account for 45.19% of regional thermal generation.

For Mexico, oil is the dominant fuel, accounting for an estimated 50.4% of 2010 primary energy demand (PED), followed by gas at 37.4%, coal at 4.7%, hydro-electric energy at 3.8% and nuclear energy with a 1.6% share of PED. Regional energy demand is forecast to reach 790mn tonnes of oil equivalent (toe) by 2015, representing 14.53% growth during 2011-2015. Mexico’s estimated market share in 2010 will have been 25.91%, easing to a forecast 24.81% by 2015. The country’s 9.7TWh of estimated nuclear demand in 2010 is forecast to reach 11.0TWh by 2015, with its share of the Latin American nuclear market set to ease from 31.09% to 30.56%.

Mexico is ranked sixth, ahead of only Venezuela, in BMI’s updated Power Business Environment Ratings, in spite of its considerable market size and reasonable growth prospects. The lack of privatisation progress, a poorly developed competitive landscape and a demanding regulatory environment conspire with country risk factors to depress the score and put Mexico near the foot of the table. While Peru is likely to remain out of reach, Mexico should be able to keep Venezuela at bay.

BMI is now forecasting average annual Mexican real GDP growth of 2.77% between 2011 and 2015, with an increase of 4.10% assumed for 2011. The population is expected to expand from 108.5mn to 113.1mn over the period, with GDP per capita forecast to increase by 39%. Electricity consumption per capita is now expected to increase during the period by around 5%. The country’s power consumption is expected to increase from an estimated 211TWh in 2010, to 237TWh by the end of the forecast period, This results in a small supply surplus after power industry usage and system losses, assuming 2.2% average annual growth in electricity generation between 2011 and 2015.

Between 2011 and 2020, we forecast an increase in Mexican electricity generation of 19.0%, below the Latin American average. This equates to 10.0% in 2015-2020, up from 8.2% in 2011-2015. PED growth is set to rise from the 2011-2015 level of 10.7% to 14.9% in 2015-2020, or 31.7% for the entire forecast period. An increase of 45% in hydro-power use in 2011-2020 is a key element of generation growth. Thermal power generation is forecast to rise by 36% between 2011 and 2020, with nuclear demand rising by 24%. More details of the longer-term BMI power forecasts can be found later in this report.


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