Mexican energy market
Mexican President-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has said he wants to evaluate the country's energy liberalization of 2013-14.
Mexico's aging transmission infrastructure is having trouble handling the current generation, speakers told the International Society for Mexico Energy.
Jeff Pavlovic, founder of energy consulting firm Bravos Energia, moved to Mexico to help design the country’s deregulated electricity markets.
Transmission developers in Mexico often struggle to gain land rights, as they do in the U.S., but for reasons unique to the country's culture and history.
The Gulf Coast Power Association’s (GCPA) third conference on the nascent Mexico electric power market drew almost 100 attendees to participate in discussions.
A top official with Mexico’s CENACE told a Gulf Coast Power Association breakfast he is intent on increasing participation in the country's capacity market.
Texas regulators are concerned that transmission projects along the U.S. border with Mexico may threaten their exclusive jurisdiction over ERCOT.
In a sign of the increasing strength of the Mexican electricity market, at least some industry experts expect little change after next year's elections.
Mexican policymakers said their country is progressing in its efforts to inject competition into the Mexican power market.
At the ERCOT Market Summit, a Mexican energy official described the benefits and challenges of energy trading with the U.S. under President Trump.
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