Gas Pipeline Plan with an Investment of More than 140 billion MXN by 2030

  • Of the more than 140 billion MXN, 101.259 billion MXN will be allocated to infrastructure projects and 39.646 billion MXN to maintenance of the national pipeline network.
  • Of the total investment, 53 billion MXN correspond to the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) and 87 billion MXN to the National Center for Natural Gas Control (CENAGAS).
  • The investment will supply natural gas to the 13 new CFE power plants and the Development Hubs for Wellbeing (PODECOBI), while also modernizing gas pipelines and other infrastructure.

The Minister of Energy, Luz Elena González Escobar, explained that Mexico currently has 21,149 kilometers (km) of gas pipelines, of which 10,087 km are operated by CENAGAS, 7,666 km by CFE, and 3,396 km by Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex) and private operators.
Source: Presidency of the Republic

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Plan México: Actions to Facilitate and Provide Certainty for Investment

As part of Plan México, the President of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, signed a series of decrees for the Immediate Authorization of Investments; the creation of the Single Window for Foreign Trade Procedures; the simplification of procedures before the Federal Commission for the Protection against Sanitary Risks (COFEPRIS); and measures to promote productive investment and tax compliance. These actions aim to ensure—through a long-term, sovereign economic strategy—decent and fair employment, the wellbeing of Mexican families, and Shared Prosperity.

Source: Presidency of the Republic

DECREE on the Immediate Authorization of Investments.

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Nichupté Bridge inaugurated in Cancún, Quintana Roo

  • Length: 11.2 km, including a 100-meter steel arch
  • It can be traveled in 10 minutes, and due to its length, it is the second longest bridge in Latin America over a body of water.
  • Investment: 10.319 billion MXN

The Government of Mexico, through the Ministry of Infrastructure, Communications and Transport (SICT), inaugurated the Nichupté Bridge in Cancún, Quintana Roo. The bridge is toll-free and is considered the second longest in Latin America over a body of water.

The bridge features three lanes—one in each direction and one reversible lane—as well as a bidirectional bike path. It also includes a 5-meter clearance (gálibo) in the navigation channel to allow the passage of vessels. An average annual daily traffic of 12,000 vehicles is projected.

Source: SICT

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