https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/m...194200755.html

Mexico's oil industry now has an organized-crime problem

Christopher Woody,Business Insider Sat, Feb 6 11:42 AM PST

Mexican oil prices fell after a brief rally earlier this week, slipping to $24.47 a barrel on Tuesday and prolonging the slide of one of the country’s most lucrative exports. In addition to the continuing downstream pain — or the brutally low prices oil is being sold for on the market — Mexico’s oil industry is dealing with a severe theft problem preventing an increasing amount of its production from ever getting to market.
Pipeline theft in Mexico rose 52% in 2015 according to an Associated Press report, a spike that comes after a 43.7% annual increase recorded in 2014.
The number of illegal taps has risen from 132 in 2001 to 3,348 in 2014.
“It is usually people from rural hamlets who live near the pipeline,” an official from the state-owned oil company, Pemex, told the AP.


“They have broken through security perimeters on almost two dozen occasions in the last year, built dams to create diesel containment ponds and hauled up fuel by the bucketful to sell,” the AP added.
Fuel theft is extremely dangerous, and dozens of civilians have been killed in related fires over the past year.
(Courtesy of Stratfor)

Drug cartels have also found fuel theft especially profitable.
In Tamaulipas state, which is close to Gulf of Mexico oil production, authorities “found that a cell of the deadly Zetas gang was organizing oil robbery and transporting the crude into Texas,” journalist Ioan Grillo reported in 2011.
Documents released by the Mexican government in early 2014 revealed that oil theft affected every Mexican state, with Los Zetas territory in Tamaulipas and Veracruz states experiencing the most rapid growth.
The powerful Sinaloa cartel has also been linked to oil theft, and in December 2015 a gang operating in Gulf cartel territory was apprehended with more than 40,000 gallons of fuel.
In 2014, Pemex lost $1.29 billion from pipeline tapping and other forms of theft. According to a 2014 report from Vice, the amount stolen is as much as 10,000 barrels a day.
(VICE News)
Workers patch up an illegal oil tap used by the cartel to steal oil from an underground pipeline in Mexico. The tap is just feet from another tap that occurred days earlier.


“They can [arrest] a few [of us], but there will always be others,” a member of Los Zetas cartel told Vice in 2014. “As long as they move gas through tubes, this is going to continue.”

While the Mexican government has recently increased jail terms for convicted oil thieves, observers have argued that harsher penalties are unlikely to deter thieves as long as they have little expectation of getting caught.

Moreover, fragmentation of Mexico’s powerful criminal groups has left behind many smaller groups that don’t have the wherewithal to pursue international drug trafficking. As a result, Insight Crime notes, those groups have turned to domestic activities, oil theft being one of the most lucrative.