Mexico invites foreign investment in clean energy transition
Mexico welcomes investment by all countries in its clean energy projects, its foreign minister said on Thursday, launching a diplomatic charm offensive amid international concerns over controversial power reforms.
A visit to a massive solar park that is being built in the desert in Puerto Penasco, northern Mexico, with photovoltaic panels made in China was made for several dozen ambassadors.
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard stated, “We want to invite all the countries of the world, all the companies of the world” to “participate, invest, be part of the future of Mexico.”
Officials say that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will open the first phase of the solar plant in April.
According to CFE, the state power provider, the park will be able to supply 1.6 million electricity users when it is finished. This is because of an estimated investment of $1.6 billion.
As part of a $48 billion renewable energy investment scheme with the United States, Mexico pledged to strengthen its emissions-cutting efforts at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt in November.
Ebrard stated at the time that the nation in Latin America had previously pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from their current levels by 2030, but that figure will now rise to 35%.
Despite tensions between the neighbors over Lopez Obrador’s efforts to expand the state’s role in the energy sector, the Mexican-US collaboration in renewable power comes about.
Washington and Ottawa have officially filed a trade complaint against Mexico, claiming that the reforms harm foreign investors and favor polluting fossil fuels over clean energy.
A visit to a massive solar park that is being built in the desert in Puerto Penasco, northern Mexico, with photovoltaic panels made in China was made for several dozen ambassadors.
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard stated, “We want to invite all the countries of the world, all the companies of the world” to “participate, invest, be part of the future of Mexico.”
Officials say that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will open the first phase of the solar plant in April.
According to CFE, the state power provider, the park will be able to supply 1.6 million electricity users when it is finished. This is because of an estimated investment of $1.6 billion.
As part of a $48 billion renewable energy investment scheme with the United States, Mexico pledged to strengthen its emissions-cutting efforts at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt in November.
Ebrard stated at the time that the nation in Latin America had previously pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from their current levels by 2030, but that figure will now rise to 35%.
Despite tensions between the neighbors over Lopez Obrador’s efforts to expand the state’s role in the energy sector, the Mexican-US collaboration in renewable power comes about.
Washington and Ottawa have officially filed a trade complaint against Mexico, claiming that the reforms harm foreign investors and favor polluting fossil fuels over clean energy.
A visit to a massive solar park that is being built in the desert in Puerto Penasco, northern Mexico, with photovoltaic panels made in China was made for several dozen ambassadors.
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard stated, “We want to invite all the countries of the world, all the companies of the world” to “participate, invest, be part of the future of Mexico.”
Officials say that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will open the first phase of the solar plant in April.
According to CFE, the state power provider, the park will be able to supply 1.6 million electricity users when it is finished. This is because of an estimated investment of $1.6 billion.
As part of a $48 billion renewable energy investment scheme with the United States, Mexico pledged to strengthen its emissions-cutting efforts at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt in November.
Ebrard stated at the time that the nation in Latin America had previously pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from their current levels by 2030, but that figure will now rise to 35%.
Despite tensions between the neighbors over Lopez Obrador’s efforts to expand the state’s role in the energy sector, the Mexican-US collaboration in renewable power comes about.
Washington and Ottawa have officially filed a trade complaint against Mexico, claiming that the reforms harm foreign investors and favor polluting fossil fuels over clean energy.
A visit to a massive solar park that is being built in the desert in Puerto Penasco, northern Mexico, with photovoltaic panels made in China was made for several dozen ambassadors.
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard stated, “We want to invite all the countries of the world, all the companies of the world” to “participate, invest, be part of the future of Mexico.”
Officials say that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will open the first phase of the solar plant in April.
According to CFE, the state power provider, the park will be able to supply 1.6 million electricity users when it is finished. This is because of an estimated investment of $1.6 billion.
As part of a $48 billion renewable energy investment scheme with the United States, Mexico pledged to strengthen its emissions-cutting efforts at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt in November.
Ebrard stated at the time that the nation in Latin America had previously pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from their current levels by 2030, but that figure will now rise to 35%.
Despite tensions between the neighbors over Lopez Obrador’s efforts to expand the state’s role in the energy sector, the Mexican-US collaboration in renewable power comes about.
Washington and Ottawa have officially filed a trade complaint against Mexico, claiming that the reforms harm foreign investors and favor polluting fossil fuels over clean energy.
A visit to a massive solar park that is being built in the desert in Puerto Penasco, northern Mexico, with photovoltaic panels made in China was made for several dozen ambassadors.
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard stated, “We want to invite all the countries of the world, all the companies of the world” to “participate, invest, be part of the future of Mexico.”
Officials say that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will open the first phase of the solar plant in April.
According to CFE, the state power provider, the park will be able to supply 1.6 million electricity users when it is finished. This is because of an estimated investment of $1.6 billion.
As part of a $48 billion renewable energy investment scheme with the United States, Mexico pledged to strengthen its emissions-cutting efforts at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt in November.
Ebrard stated at the time that the nation in Latin America had previously pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from their current levels by 2030, but that figure will now rise to 35%.
Despite tensions between the neighbors over Lopez Obrador’s efforts to expand the state’s role in the energy sector, the Mexican-US collaboration in renewable power comes about.
Washington and Ottawa have officially filed a trade complaint against Mexico, claiming that the reforms harm foreign investors and favor polluting fossil fuels over clean energy.
A visit to a massive solar park that is being built in the desert in Puerto Penasco, northern Mexico, with photovoltaic panels made in China was made for several dozen ambassadors.
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard stated, “We want to invite all the countries of the world, all the companies of the world” to “participate, invest, be part of the future of Mexico.”
Officials say that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will open the first phase of the solar plant in April.
According to CFE, the state power provider, the park will be able to supply 1.6 million electricity users when it is finished. This is because of an estimated investment of $1.6 billion.
As part of a $48 billion renewable energy investment scheme with the United States, Mexico pledged to strengthen its emissions-cutting efforts at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt in November.
Ebrard stated at the time that the nation in Latin America had previously pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from their current levels by 2030, but that figure will now rise to 35%.
Despite tensions between the neighbors over Lopez Obrador’s efforts to expand the state’s role in the energy sector, the Mexican-US collaboration in renewable power comes about.
Washington and Ottawa have officially filed a trade complaint against Mexico, claiming that the reforms harm foreign investors and favor polluting fossil fuels over clean energy.
A visit to a massive solar park that is being built in the desert in Puerto Penasco, northern Mexico, with photovoltaic panels made in China was made for several dozen ambassadors.
Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard stated, “We want to invite all the countries of the world, all the companies of the world” to “participate, invest, be part of the future of Mexico.”
Officials say that President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will open the first phase of the solar plant in April.
According to CFE, the state power provider, the park will be able to supply 1.6 million electricity users when it is finished. This is because of an estimated investment of $1.6 billion.
As part of a $48 billion renewable energy investment scheme with the United States, Mexico pledged to strengthen its emissions-cutting efforts at the COP27 climate talks in Egypt in November.
Ebrard stated at the time that the nation in Latin America had previously pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 22% from their current levels by 2030, but that figure will now rise to 35%.
Despite tensions between the neighbors over Lopez Obrador’s efforts to expand the state’s role in the energy sector, the Mexican-US collaboration in renewable power comes about.
Washington and Ottawa have officially filed a trade complaint against Mexico, claiming that the reforms harm foreign investors and favor polluting fossil fuels over clean energy.