Ecuador gives oil firms until March to sign deals

QUITO (Reuters) – Oil companies operating in Ecuador  have until March to sign new contracts or the government will  “change the rules of the game” to give the state more control over  the sector, President Rafael Correa said yesterday.

The socialist leader was first elected in 2006 on promises of  helping the poor and taking a tough stance with international  investors who he accuses of pillaging the country’s wealth.

Correa’s rhetoric has toughened as the negotiation of  contracts approaches. But he apparently does not want to go so far  as to choke off the private investment that his OPEC-member  country needs to bolster its key oil sector.

“Either they sign the new contracts by March or we are going  to change the rules of the game and the relationship between the  companies and the state,” Correa said during a televised town hall  meeting.

“I will meet with the companies and we are going to speak  plainly. They will invest or leave the country,” he said.

Private firms — such as Spain’s Repsol, Brazil’s Petrobras  and Italy’s Eni — are expected by the government to produce  195,342 barrels of oil per day next year, down from 201,369  barrels per day in 2009.