PetroEcuador
Finds Evidence of Widespread Corporate Corruption
QUITO
Petroleumworld.com, Jan 08, 2008
The new management at Ecuadorean
state energy company PetroEcuador found evidence of widespread
corruption at the company.
``There is theft in the tens of thousands, tens of millions,
hundreds of millions of dollars,'' Admiral Fernando Zurita,
president of PetroEcuador, told reporters in Quito today.
``We will find much more as a result of the review that
we are making of oil contracts.''
Ecuador President Rafael Correa on Nov. 29 declared a
state of emergency for the company, saying it was so badly
run, he was forced to bring in navy officers to run the
company.
``Previously there were not enough people to fight this,''
Zurita said. Some executives bought equipment for tens
of millions of dollars only to let it rot in storehouses
at subsidiaries, he said. ``I will discover who ordered
those things and send them to his desk or home and demand
my money back,'' Zurita said.
He also plans to set up a corporate area for the protection
of the environment that will cost the company $55 million.
The lack of in-house cleanup capacity has cost PetroEcuador
$350 million over the past three years as private-sector
companies have billed it to handle oil spills, Zurita said.
The company has a budget of $4.24 billion for 2008, up
72 percent from $2.47 billion last year, he said. Investment
will almost triple to $2.06 billion from $724.57 million
last year. Ecuador expects to spend $3.61 billion in importing
fuels, up 20 percent from $3.01 billion last year.
Lacking Refining Capacity
The Andean country lacks refining capacity to meet domestic
demand for gasoline and diesel despite being a member of
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
PetroEcuador's total output will reach 309,000 by the
end of this year, Zurita also said, up from an estimate
of 297,000 as recently as Dec. 20.
Ecuador, the smallest OPEC oil producer, has a daily output
of about 500,000 barrels. Energy Minister Galo Chiriboga
also said today that Ecuador will ask OPEC for a quota
above 520,000 barrels a day in the near term as the country
expects production capacity to reach that level this year.
He added that he expected OPEC to agree.
Story
by
Stephan
Kueffner from
Bloomberg
-skueffner@bloomberg.net
Bloomberg 07 01 08
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