Adds new tax incentive for fuel importers.
Peruvian fuel distributor Primax signed an agreement with PetroEcuador to use its infrastructure for imports, the latest company to break into a space long dominated by the state-owned firm.
PetroEcuador recently signed similar agreements with Terpel and Duragas, subsidiaries of Chile's Copec, and local firms Corpetrol and WFSE.
Primax, part of Peru's Romero Group, will pay PetroEcuador a fee of $0.027 per gallon for the use of its facilities.
Primax already holds about 22pc marketshare in Ecuador's retail fuel market, on par with local distributor Petroleos y Servicios, according to Ecuador's fuel distributors' chamber. PetroEcuador has 19pc and Terpel 8pc.
Primax's chief executive in Ecuador, Karl Castillo, said the imports will help to improve local product quality.
The import agreements are part of the Ecuadorean government's broad push to open the oil industry to private-sector investment from the wellhead to the pump.
The initial private-sector imports are likely to focus on high-octane gasoline which is the only motor fuel grade not subject to a current suspension of market-based price adjustments. LPG for industrial use is also free of price caps.
Ecuador's national customs agency (SENAE) and the production and foreign trade ministry said today that freight costs have been eliminated from the taxable base for the calculation of import duties, lowering fiscal barriers and exposure to rising international freight rates.