“Reform” is one of those words that means anything you want it to mean. It’s been deployed in so many political fights, it has really lost its meaning in most contexts. I suppose some people still say a teen car thief is sent off to “reform school,” but I doubt it. Here in Mexico City, that word is loaded. I’m writing this 12 floors up from the Paseo de la Reforma, the grand boulevard named for the civil war between liberals and conservatives here in the 1850s and 1860s. “Reform” today in Mexico means the multi-billion dollar undertaking by the government in education, telecommunications, labor and, most importantly to me, energy. Like anyone trying to get anywhere through traffic in the capital, the makeover is running late. Right now it’s about a year late. Traffic circle outside the Mexico City energy conference. Investors will need the craftiness of Diana […]