Mexican president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador nominated three candidates with close ties to the state energy sector to replace Guillermo Garcia Alcocer as president of the energy regulatory commission following Garcia Alcocer's resignation in June.
The commission approves permits for retail fuel stations, storage and transportation of fuels and petrochemicals and those related to power generation. Yet a backlog of permit applications grew while it lacked a quorum for about four months earlier this year.
The CRE requires at least four active commissioners to conduct official business and it currently has five, just one of which — Luis Guillermo Pineda — was elected under the previous administration.
The candidates — who must be approved by a two-thirds majority of the senate energy commission and a cross-party commission — are Maria del Rosio Vargas, Alfonso Lopez and Leopoldo Melchi.
Vargas, an engineer, has worked for state-owned Pemex's natural gas and petrochemical planning department since 1996.
Lopez, a chemical engineer, has worked in the energy ministry since February as director of hydrocarbon contracts and previously as head of a chlorine plant in the Pajaritos petrochemical complex in Pajaritos, Veracruz.
Melchi, a chemical engineer, has worked in Pemex's upstream and downstream units.
The chosen candidate will serve as commissioner until December 2022.
Garcia Alcocer resigned in June citing differences with the commissioners nominated by Lopez Obrador. Alcocer had criticized the candidates because of their lack of technical expertise in the electricity sector, one of the main sectors regulated by the CRE.