Mexico's first underground LPG storage facility will begin operating by the second quarter of 2016 near the Pajaritos petrochemical complex in the coastal state of Veracruz, one of the project executives told Argus.
Almacenamiento Subterraneo del Sureste, a joint venture between US midstream energy company SalTec International and its Mexican partner Cydsa, earlier this month obtained a permit to build and operate a 1.8mn bl LPG salt cavern under a 20-year contract with Mexico's state-run oil company Pemex.
The first phase of the project requires $110mn-$150mn. The cavern could eventually be expanded to 2.6mn bl, SalTec International president Lawrence Kelly said.
The gas stored in the facility will include both domestically produced LPG and imports from the US and the Middle East, via the nearby Gulf port of Coatzacoalcos.
"This administration and the energy reform have been a catalyst for our storage projects," Kelly said. "Mexico is now a major importer of natural gas, LPG and gasoline, so it needs enough storage," he added, noting that a new government focus on gas storage should enable Mexico to save money by improving supply chain logistics.
Around 80pc of Mexican homes use LPG, but consumption waned slightly last year to 8.63mn tons in 2013 from 8.84mn t in 2012, according to an Argus survey produced jointly with the World LPG Association.
Mexico currently produces around 210,000 b/d of LPG. Pemex imports nearly 30pc of the LPG needed to meet local demand, mostly from its prolific US neighbor. But the energy reform could boost domestic NGLs production with the break-up of Pemex´s longstanding upstream monopoly. A first-ever licensing round will get underway next month with an initial package of shallow water blocks.
In an announcement on 10 October, the government said it will freeze LPG prices starting in January 2015, ahead of a market-based pricing system in 2017.
SalTec International and Cydsa have been working together on storage projects in Mexico for nearly 15 years. The two companies obtained a permit in 2007 to construct and operate Mexico's first-ever underground natural gas storage facility in Veracruz. The facility was supposed to have been built over a two-year period once financing was arranged. Construction is still underway but has been delayed on numerous occasions because of a lack of momentum around the need for storage, Kelly said.
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