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Mexico’s electricity demand hits record amid extreme heat and water shortages

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FILE PHOTO: A woman cools herself with a fan at her home on a hot spring day amid a nationwide drought and heatwaves that have sent temperatures soaring across much of the country, in Veracruz, Mexico, May 21, 2024. REUTERS/Yahir Ceballos/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A woman cools herself with a fan at her home on a hot spring day amid a nationwide drought and heatwaves that have sent temperatures soaring across much of the country, in Veracruz, Mexico, May 21, 2024. REUTERS/Yahir Ceballos/File Photo

By Stefanie Eschenbacher

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexico has been consuming record amounts of electricity and occasionally more than its utility infrastructure can generate and transmit, official data showed, as scorching heat and water shortages raise the likelihood of power outages.

In the late afternoon on Monday, Mexico consumed 51,595 megawatts of electricity across the country, grid operator CENACE recorded. When demand exceeds supply, the country becomes much more prone to outages.

With some widespread outages so far this year already, and even hotter days forecast, water and electricity have become major election issues ahead of a national vote on Sunday.

Finding a sustainable solution that keeps up with rising demand will be a major challenge for the next president.

State-owned utility CFE, a near-monopoly that produces 99.47% of Mexico’s electricity, and state-owned grid operator CENACE are suffering from aging and insufficient infrastructure as well as inadequate efforts to modernize and invest in renewable power sources.

“There have been too many years now where demand was growing but there was an underinvestment in electricity generation and transmission,” said Paul Alejandro Sanchez, an independent energy consultant. “The challenge isn’t the average demand. It’s when demand spikes to such extremes.”

Heat has driven electricity consumption by both households and industries, but Mexico also keeps growing. Increasing supply in the short term is difficult, and hydroelectric plants in particular have also been hit by extreme water shortages.

Over the past six years, energy nationalist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has prioritized CFE, which largely burns fuel oil, a residual waste product Pemex refineries are producing, to generate electricity.

Under Lopez Obrador, experts have criticized that electricity generation has become dirtier, more expensive and less sustainable.

He also curtailed growth of privately owned generators, many of which have seen their renewable energy plans stymied.

International organizations have said Mexico is ideally positioned to become a clean energy powerhouse given its high solar radiation, wind capacity and geothermal sources.

Mexico relied on fossil fuels for 77% of its electricity generation last year, according to Ember. Its largest source of clean electricity is solar, with 6%.

Lopez Obrador is barred from running for a second term in Sunday’s election. But the three candidates vying for the presidency of Latin America’s second-largest economy have vowed to tap the country’s vast solar, wind and water potential to generate more electricity.

Claudia Sheinbaum of Lopez Obrador’s ruling Morena party, who is leading the polls, and her closest opponent, Xochitl Galvez, have said they would focus on renewable energy to boost sustainability.

The National Autonomous University of Mexico forecasts new heat records in some states will lead to “an increase in energy demand, poor air quality and forest fires.”

(Reporting by Stefanie Eschenbacher; Additional reporting by Adriana Barrera and Brendan O’Boyle; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Stephen Coates)

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