Investment Policy Monitor
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UNCTAD has been collecting information on changes in national foreign direct investment (FDI) policies on an annual basis since 1992. This collection has provided input to the analysis of global and regional investment policy trends in the World Investment Report, the quarterly Investment Policy Monitor (since 2009) and the UNCTAD-OECD Reports on G20 Measures.
In 2011, to further strengthen the quality of reporting, UNCTAD revised the methodology of monitoring investment policy measures. and revised the measures going back to 2000 accordingly.
The Investment Policy Monitor provides the international investment community with country-specific, up-to-date information about the latest developments in foreign investment policies.
Through its monitoring of investment policy changes, UNCTAD offers cutting-edge and innovative contributions to investment policy discourse, and contributes to preparing the ground for future policymaking in the interest of making foreign investment work for growth and development.
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Note: the policy measures are identified through a systematic review of government and business intelligence sources. Measures are verified, to the fullest extent possible, by referencing government sources. The compilation of measures is not exhaustive.
Disclaimer: the boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.
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- Mexico - Reforms and tightens legal framework on hidrocarbons
Mexico
Reforms and tightens legal framework on hidrocarbons
05 May 2021On 5 May, a reform package for Mexico's Hydrocarbon Law entered into force. The reform grants the State new powers to exercise regulatory control over the distribution, storage, import and export of fuels and oil produced in the country. The amended text grants the energy Ministry (Secretaría de Energía) and the energy regulator (Comisión Reguladora de Energía) the power to revoke operation permits in the oil and gas sub-sectors under qualified circumstances. It also grants PEMEX (Petróleos Mexicanos) and other State-owned entities a preferential right to take over unused facilities from operators whose permits have been reverted.
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Type:
- Treatment and operation (Operational conditions)
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Industry:
- Manufacturing (Manufacture of coke and refined petroleum products)
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Sources:
- National Assembly - Camara de Diputados, DOF publica decreto que reforma la Ley de Hidrocarburos, https://comunicacionnoticias.diputados.gob.mx/comunicacion/index.php/notilegis/dof-publica-decreto-que-reforma-la-ley-de-hidrocarburos#gsc.tab=0, 04 May 2021
- JDSupra, Mexico Targets Foreign Investors in Oil and Gas Sector with Changes to Hydrocarbon Law, https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/mexico-targets-foreign-investors-in-oil-5057712/, 18 May 2021
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UNCTAD has been collecting information on changes in national foreign direct investment (FDI) policies on an annual basis since 1992. This collection has provided input to the analysis of global and regional investment policy trends in the World Investment Report, the quarterly Investment Policy Monitor (since 2009) and the UNCTAD-OECD Reports on G20 Measures.
In 2011, to further strengthen the quality of reporting, UNCTAD revised the methodology of monitoring investment policy measures. and revised the measures going back to 2000 accordingly.
The Investment Policy Monitor provides the international investment community with country-specific, up-to-date information about the latest developments in foreign investment policies.
Through its monitoring of investment policy changes, UNCTAD offers cutting-edge and innovative contributions to investment policy discourse, and contributes to preparing the ground for future policymaking in the interest of making foreign investment work for growth and development.
-
Note: the policy measures are identified through a systematic review of government and business intelligence sources. Measures are verified, to the fullest extent possible, by referencing government sources. The compilation of measures is not exhaustive.
Disclaimer: the boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.