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Mexico's Olmeca will restart its refinery and the halt was "nothing serious," says President.

Mexico's new Olmeca refining plant is ready to resume production, Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum announced on Tuesday. She denied that the temporary outage was caused by sabotage at its catalytic unit.

The Olmeca Refinery, located in the port of Dos Bocas is still a long way from achieving the goals for gasoline and diesel set by Sheinbaum’s predecessor.

The president said "It's nothing like that" in response to a reporter's question about alleged sabotage by the state-owned energy company Pemex. He did not provide any further details.

The catalytic unit is a key part of the refinery which produces gasoline. It uses fluidized catalysts to break heavy hydrocarbon molecules down into gasoline molecules.

Sheinbaum stated that she would have a Pemex representative report back on the incident.

It's not that the refinery has suddenly stopped working. She said, "It's not a big deal. It was producing 100,000 barrels per day, and it is about to restart. It's not serious."

Pemex has not responded to an information request about events at the refinery. The date of any incidents or current production levels were also not provided.

In February, the refinery processed only 6,797 barrels per day (bpd) and in January none at all. The company had reported that the pumps for crude oil Pemex were leaking more salt and water than usual. The refinery has the capacity to process up to 340,000 bpd. Processing has been marginal since June 2024.

Last week, it was reported that Pemex had exported two shipments ultra-low sulfur diesel (ULSD), processed at Olmeca. This is because the infrastructure required to distribute motor fuels that Mexico imports has not been completed. (Reporting and writing by Ana Isabel Martinez, Rafael Escalera Montoto, Editing by Stefanie Eschenbacher and Alistair Bell).

(source: Reuters)