EconomyFinancialPemex offers technical support to Cuba for the reconstruction...

Pemex offers technical support to Cuba for the reconstruction of the burned oil warehouse

The Mexican state oil company Pemex reported on Tuesday that company executives met with the Cuban ambassador to the country to coordinate support for the reconstruction of an oil facility that caught fire earlier this month on the Caribbean island.

The Mexican giant, which is struggling with a heavy debt, said on its Twitter account that among the agreements it was established to hold technical meetings with the oil company's specialists "to exchange opinions with those responsible for the reconstruction project in #Cuba." , without giving further details.

At the beginning of the month, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador sent at least 85 soldiers and specialists from Pemex to Cuba to help put out the fire that occurred in fuel tanks at the supertanker port of Matanzas.

López Obrador has sought to strengthen ties with Cuba and in June decided not to attend the Summit of the Americas in the United States in protest that the host country excluded Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela from the guest list.

Meanwhile, Cuba said last Friday that it requested technical assistance from the United States to clean up after the huge fire, which left 16 firefighters dead, generated after lightning struck an oil storage tank.

Washington regards Cuba's communist government as an enemy and has maintained a harsh sanctions regime since shortly after former leader Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution.

For the first time, Pemex exports a shipment of crude oil from a private...

The cargo contained crude oil from three fields awarded to the Italian ENI in 2015. The ship would have been destined for Spain, sources told Expansión.

#GuacamayaLeaks: Sedena leaks link Adán Augusto López with the huachicol network in Tabasco

The name of the former governor of Tabasco, today Secretary of the Interior, is part of a network dedicated to fuel theft that federal investigations call 'The Olmec Case'.

LAST MINUTE: A Pemex pipeline explodes in Tabasco

It is the second incident in the oil company's facilities that has been recorded in the municipality of Huimanguillo during the last two weeks.

Pemex has failed to report the large methane emissions in its fields

ASEA, the environmental regulator for hydrocarbons, has no records on Pemex's large emissions.

Why Pemex is choking the production of one of its priority fields

The state-owned company has at times obtained more water than oil from the field. A large amount of water extracted could lead to a premature closure of the field, analysts say.

More