Jose Antonio Prado and Carlos Ochoa are Partners and Alberto Esenaro Arteaga is an Associate all in our in our Mexico City office.

Mexico's Energy Reform of 2013 opened activities of the country's power market to private investors. Before the reform, large-scale power generation was reserved to the state-run Comisión Federal de Electricidad (CFE), or to private investors through government contracts under an independent power producer structure. Self-supply and co-generation was allowed if complying with certain regulations.

Under the Power Industry Law, power plants with capacity below 0.5 megawatts (MW), designated as small capacity plants, are not required to obtain a permit from the Energy Regulatory Commission, or Comisión Reguladora de Energía (CRE). However, they can generate only for self-use or trade through a basic power supplier.

In December 2016, Mexico's Ministry of Energy issued the manual for requesting and keeping interconnection to the public power network of small capacity plants.

The manual is an important step toward completing the Mexican government's efforts to make the power market and Mexican wholesale electricity market (MEM) functional, as well as to opening opportunities to all investors sector-wide.

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