Difference between revisions of "Fuel Prices Mexico"

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[[Category:Mexico]]

Latest revision as of 14:56, 12 March 2015

Part of: GIZ International Fuel Price database
Also see: Mexico Energy Situation

Fuel Pricing Policies

Local Currency: MXN
Exchange Rate: 12.483


(2010/11/17)

Last Update:

Pricing: Retail price adjustments are decoupled from world price movements and smoothed by adjusting the special tax on production and service. For gasoline and diesel, this tax was negative for three years until May 2009, when it became positive gasoline, and has been negative since Jun 2009 for gasoline and since Jul 2009 for diesel. In 2012, the special tax averaged –US$0.22/liter for regular gasoline, –US$0.23 for diesel, and –US$0.30 for premium gasoline. Regular gasoline and diesel prices were raised at a nominal annual rate of 10–11% in 2010, 2011, and 2012. In 2007, the price of diesel rose by only 4% and gasoline by 5%. The price of regular gasoline grew at only 7% in 2008 and 6% in 2009, but the price of diesel rose by 21% and 16%, respectively. The pace of increase has not been enough to catch up with rising world prices since 2010. Monthly average retail diesel prices and benchmark FOB prices relevant to Mexico are shown below. It is clear that, although not as large as in 2008, a sizable subsidy continues. When the benchmark LPG prices in Belvieu, Texas, United States, are high, LPG prices in Mexico are kept below import-parity levels, despite Mexico’s being a large net importer of LPG. Under Mexico’s climate law, passed in Apr 2012 and only the second in the world after UK’s Climate Change Act of 2008, government will formulate rules to phase out fossil fuel subsidies.

Consequences of subsidies: The annual implicit subsidy in 2011 for LPG alone amounted to MXN40 billion (US$3.2 billion). Pemex has had trouble moving refinery projects forward, turning Mexico into a significant importer of petroleum products.

Hedging: Although different from hedging petroleum product prices to protect consumers, Mexico hedges crude exports every year to protect fiscal revenues. Government achieved remarkable success by hedging crude oil exports in 2009, spending US$1.5 billion for hedging contracts and earning US$5 billion in return.

Information: Ministry of Energy posts detailed price information on petroleum products. For LPG, Ministry of Energy regulates transport and distribution tariffs, and Ministry of Economy gazettes maximum consumer prices in 145 distribution zones every month."

(Source: Kojima, Masami. (2013, forthcoming). “Petroleum product pricing and complementary policies:Experience of 65 developing countries since 2009.” Washington DC: World Bank.)

Fuel Prices and Trends

Gasoline 95 Octane Diesel
in USD*

in Local Currency

* benchmark lines: green=US price; grey=price in Spain; red=price of Crude Oil



Fuel Price Composition

Price composition for one litre of Gasoline 95 Octane as of 2010/11/01.


GIZ IFP2012 Mexico1.png
GIZ IFP2012 Mexico2.png


No further information available.


Tax info: http://www.economywatch.com/business-and-economy/mexico.html

At a Glance

Regulation-Price-Matrix
Transparency of
Price Composition
Transparency of Pricing
Mechanism / Monitoring
IFPDB matrix background.png
IFPDB matrix point.png
IFPDB trafficlight red.png IFPDB trafficlight explanation.png IFPDB trafficlight yellow.png



Sources to the Public

Type of Information Web-Link / Source
Other Information http://www.cre.gob.mx (Energy Regulatory Commission)
Other Information http://www.onexpo.com.mx (National Organisation of Petroleum Expenders)
Other Information http://www.pemex.com/ (Petroleos Mexicanos)
Other Information http://www.shcp.gob.mx (Ministry of Finance and Public Credit)
Price Composition http://bit.ly/1MvQkES (SECRETARÍA DE ENERGÍA, MÉXICO)
Pump prices and margins http://www.ri.pemex.com/files/dcpe/petro/epublico_esp.pdf


Contact

Please find more information on GIZ International Fuel Price Database and http://www.giz.de/fuelprices

This is a living document. If you have any comments or suggestions, please feel free to contact us: Armin.Wagner@giz.de

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