Mexico wants 'energy corridor' border
Collaboration could aid region, energy secretary says
SALTILLO, Mexico (AP) -- Mexico wants to see its border with the United
States become an "energy corridor" with pipelines and power lines
running across the 2,000-mile boundary to meet a growing demand in
both countries, Mexico's energy secretary said Thursday.
Speaking at the 9th annual Border Energy Forum, Energy Secretary Ernesto
Martens sa id the
neighboring nations are missing out on opportunities because of a lack
of infrastructure to be
able to send natural gas and electricity across the border.
"Our challenge is to convert the zone into an energy corridor that supports
and contributes to
the development of the border region," Martens said.
U.S. and Mexican business leaders and government officials are meeting
in the northern city of
Saltillo to discuss ways the two sides can work together. The conference
ends Friday.
"If we had more integration, our prices would be better, our reliability
would be better and even
our understanding of the market would flow better," said Veronica Angulo,
of the White House
Task Force on Energy Projects.
Demand already is outstripping supply on both sides of the industrialized
border region and
projections show it is expected to more than double over the next decade.
In the past few years, the United States has turned to Mexico -- with its
vast natural gas
deposits -- for its energy needs. While the fuel is cleaner and more efficient
than oil or coal, the
deposits are in remote areas, beyond the reach of pipelines.
Mexico has electricity to give but its border region has lacked the lines
to deliver it to California,
which suffers power shortages, Martens said.
Baja California state now is seeing companies line up to build generating
plants to supply
energy-starved California.
Two power plants are under construction near the border town of Mexicali,
as is a 215-mile
natural gas pipeline between Blythe, Calif., and Tijuana. Other U.S. firms
have their own projects
on the drawing boards.
But "a robust" binational plan is needed to transform the Mexican border
into a major supplier for
both sides, Martens said.
Environmentalists fear companies may be taking advantage of Mexico's vulnerability
as a poorer
nation to accept air pollution and other environmental woes generated by
the plants that
Americans don't want in their cities.
Officials promised to take the environmental impact into account.
Copyright 2002 The Associated Press.