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Mirage Energy Corp MRGE

Mirage Energy Corporation, through its wholly owned subsidiaries, focuses on developing an integrated pipeline and natural gas storage facilities in Mexico and the United States. The Company is proposing to develop the Concho-Progreso Pipeline connecting South Texas and Mexico through its proposed Progreso International crossing under the Rio Grande River. All of the pipelines are revised upward from 36 to 42-inch diameter pipes. The total length of the Concho-Progreso pipeline is estimated to be about 250 miles. In addition to the proposed pipelines and international crossing, the Company proposes to develop the Campo Brasil natural gas storage reservoir. The Campo Brasil is a depleted natural gas reservoir field. This field is located approximately 14 miles from the proposed Progreso Line. Its subsidiaries include 4Ward Resources, Inc. (Texas), WPF MEXICO PIPELINES, S. de R.L. de C.V. (Mexico), WPF TRANSMISSION, INC. (Texas), and CENOTE ENERGY S. de R.L. de C.V. (Mexico).


GREY:MRGE - Post by User

Post by pmseekeron Feb 03, 2019 1:06pm
194 Views
Post# 29312050

Mexico needs nat. gas

Mexico needs nat. gasHydrocarbon rigs in the Gulf of Mexico (Chad Teer, Flickr) Adopting natural gas could also benefit Mexicos future development in another way, by reducing its notoriously high energy costs. Electricity rates in the country are an average of 25 percent higher than those in the United States (or 73 percent if subsidies are discounted). The relatively lower cost of combined cycle natural gas power plants could help bring down energy prices, giving a boost to the Mexican economy. A 2016 study by the International Monetary Fund predicted that, based on plausible reduction in energy prices brought on by the substitution of fuel oil for natural gas, Mexicos manufacturing output could increase by up to 3.6 percent, or more if Mexican electricity prices converge to those seen in the U.S. The impact of natural gas power on Mexican energy prices could already be taking effect. Between 2013 and 2015, the price of electricity fell by approximately 13 percent, from $80 per megawatt-hour to $70. The IEA attribute this change largely to the switch to natural gas for fuel generation. Curbing an addiction Opening up Mexicos natural gas reserves to outside investors could also benefit the economy in a different way. Mexicos natural gas production has been decline since 2010, and in that time, the county has become highly dependent on gas imports from the southern United States. Much of this has been substituted for imported natural gas from the southern United States, which now supplies more than 50 percent of Mexicos gas demand (Bloomberg even went as far as to call Mexicos dependence on U.S. gas an addiction). These imports are vital to the Mexican economy, and have allowed the country to displace some of its fuel oil power generation for natural gas in recent years. But Mexicos increasing dependence on U.S. imports is also making the country more vulnerable to supply shortages from across the border. For example, a 2017 study in the journal Energy Economics found that in 2013, natural gas shortages in Mexico caused by disruptions to imports from the U.S. caused an appreciable reduction in the growth of Mexicos GDP. By helping Mexico to better tap its own natural gas reserves, the new energy reform has the potential to protect the country from supply intermittencies from the United States which, given the current diplomatic relations between the two countries at the moment, are far from predictable.
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