Natural-gas boom rides on NAFTA

Keep Mexico trade deal intact, fellow Texans urge Perry

The sun sets behind the BP-Husky Toledo Refinery in Oregon, Ohio, on June 13. Mexico relies on U.S. natural gas to fuel more than a quarter of its electricity production, but the market faces disruption if there is a renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The sun sets behind the BP-Husky Toledo Refinery in Oregon, Ohio, on June 13. Mexico relies on U.S. natural gas to fuel more than a quarter of its electricity production, but the market faces disruption if there is a renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

HOUSTON -- Of all the industries thrown into question by President Donald Trump's promise to upend free trade with Mexico, natural gas is easily one of the biggest.

More than a quarter of Mexico's electricity is powered by U.S. natural gas, leaving it especially vulnerable to any upheavals from a trade battle with the United States.

But selling natural gas to Mexico is also a godsend for the U.S. energy industry, which is lobbying the White House to emphasize just how crucial the relationship with Mexico is.

With billions of dollars at stake and zigzagging administration stances on trade, U.S. energy companies are taking no chances. They are also setting their sights on an old friend in a unique position to help: Rick Perry, the former governor of Texas, who recently served on the board of a pipeline company that ships natural gas to Mexico and who is now Trump's energy secretary.

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"What we will do is reach out to our own Texan, Energy Secretary Rick Perry, and bend his ear," said Steven H. Pruett, chief executive of Elevation Resources, a Texas oil and gas company. "And say, 'Please, please get the Trump administration to back off of the NAFTA cancellation rhetoric and enable us to continue to have the economic boom that natural gas has created for Texas.'"

Under the North American Free Trade Agreement, which Trump has threatened to terminate unless he can get a "fair deal" for the United States, the authorization of natural gas exports is virtually automatic.

But if the United States pulls out of the agreement, it will be up to the Energy Department to approve future gas exports considered to be in the national interest.

That places Perry in a pivotal role at a tense time, and there is good reason to consider him a friend of the industry. As governor of Texas, he defended the hydraulic fracturing drilling practice to promote his state's oil production and natural gas exports. Under his watch, production of natural gas in the state soared 50 percent.

After he left office, Perry joined the board of Energy Transfer Partners, a company that has completed four gas pipelines to Mexico in the past two years.

And when Perry ran for president in 2016, the company's chief executive became the single biggest contributor to Perry's campaign.

Kelcy Warren, Energy Transfer's chief executive, donated more than $6 million of the $16.7 million raised by the 2016 Perry presidential campaign, according to Federal Election Commission data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics. Most of the money was then returned to Warren when Perry dropped out of the race.

"Rick Perry is a really good friend of mine and he is a bright guy," Warren said. "He understands the energy business quite well, and it gives me great comfort that he is in that position."

Last month, the Trump administration gave Congress official notice that it planned to renegotiate NAFTA, a pact that the president has called "the worst trade deal ever."

Then this month, the American Petroleum Institute, one of the strongest lobbies in Washington, made its position unmistakably clear in an open letter to the administration stating that "the current NAFTA agreement works for the oil and gas industry."

Perry said he understands the symbiotic nature of the relationship between Mexico and U.S. energy companies, and he has promised to do what he can to maintain it. Even in the unlikely event that NAFTA could not be renegotiated, he said, he would fully support continuing the energy trade.

"I see this as an opportunity to allow an American natural resource to help bolster both countries' economies," he said. "The overall goal of the Trump administration is to sell what Americans make to bolster this economy. If you are selling it to a partner, a neighbor, even better."

Perry said his stance was not clouded by his former job on the board of Energy Transfer. Having already passed through the revolving door between government and the energy industry, Perry said, he was in no way conflicted about his new role.

"I work for Donald Trump and I work for the American people," he said.

Trump's threats against Mexico and shifting statements about withdrawing from NAFTA have prompted some worry, however, persuading Mexican officials to begin exploring options in the event of a cutoff.

"In the context of an escalating trade war, a cutoff of gas by one side or the other is possible," said Kevin Book, managing director of ClearView Energy Partners, an energy research firm.

Such a move, according to Book, would summon what he calls a "mutually assured destruction scenario," in which U.S. companies suffer a serious loss of income and Mexico faces an energy shortage that could devastate the most basic functions of its megacapital, Mexico City.

The effect on the United States could also hit home for some of the most important members of Trump's Cabinet and support base. With U.S. gas exports to Mexico expected to double by 2019, most gas will come from Texas, a vital Republican stronghold that is the home state of both Perry and Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson.

Trump's threats have "created some worry on Mexico's part, and as a result Mexico has looked at its backups and alternatives," said Carlos Pascual, the former U.S. ambassador to Mexico and a senior vice president for IHS Global Energy. "But the first screams that would go up if the U.S. were to cut off natural gas shipments to Mexico would come from the oil and gas producers in Texas."

Business on 06/28/2017

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