
Tuesday, June 16th, 2026
Moody’s Ratings issued a sector-wide alert on Colombia’s energy and gas industry, warning that credit conditions for companies across the chain — generation, transmission, and distribution — will continue to deteriorate at least until the first half of 2027.



Colombia set a new record in the first week of June 2026, with imported gas reaching 32% of total national gas consumption — the highest share ever recorded in the country’s energy balance.
The Unión Sindical Obrera (USO) announced in the early hours of June 13 that it had reached a collective agreement with Ecopetrol, closing a labor conflict that had been running since May 2025 and which included a 24-hour strike the union called to press its demands. Negotiations concluded at approximately 4:50 a.m., according to the union.
The Ministry of Mines and Energy formally issued a resolution on June 13 activating a preventive supply protection plan for the scheduled maintenance of the SPEC LNG regasification terminal in Cartagena, set to run from July 30 to August 3, 2026.
Presidential candidate Abelardo De la Espriella released a gas policy document on June 11 outlining his administration’s approach to resolving Colombia’s looming supply deficit, with vice-presidential candidate and former minister José Manuel Restrepo serving as the technical face of the proposal.
Or the dominance of Ecopetrol in Colombian statistics means what it does pulls the national conclusions. In any event, 2025 was another weak year for exploration and discoveries. Sharp pencils and improved recovery saved ECP’s reserves from falling.
Elevated Brent crude prices driven by sustained Middle East tensions are handing Colombia a significant fiscal windfall in 2026.