Wednesday, March 25th, 2026
Writing on X on March 22, 2026, President Gustavo Petro outlined his government’s response to the prospect of oil prices climbing to US$180/barrel by May – a scenario flagged by Saudi Arabia – placing Ecopetrol at the center of a new fertilizer subsidy mechanism while firmly closing the door on gasoline subsidies.



President Gustavo Petro spoke publicly on Ecopetrol twice in March, offering a consistent reading of the company’s deteriorating financial performance and using both opportunities to reinforce his energy transition agenda.
Naturgas president Luz Stella Murgas used a March 18, 2026 interview with El Heraldo to preview the agenda and ambitions of the upcoming Naturgas Congress, to be held in Cartagena from April 15 to 17 — the association’s most prominent annual gathering.
Ecopetrol closed 2025 with net profits of CoP$9.02T — down 39.5% and the lowest figure since 2021 — capping a third consecutive year of earnings deterioration. What can be done?
In an exclusive interview with Valora Analitik on March 20, 2026, Imad Mohsen, global president of Canadian independent Parex Resources, offered one of the most unambiguously positive assessments of Colombia’s investment climate heard from a senior oil executive in years — and one that stands in pointed contrast to the alarm being sounded by domestic sector associations over regulatory uncertainty and unpaid government debts.
Against the backdrop of Venezuela’s first LPG shipment to Colombia and a new Campetrol report showing 2025 oil production down 3% and gas output down 17%, Colombian Petroleum Association (ACP) president Frank Pearl issued a pointed call for domestic energy self-reliance.
Two regasification projects at different stages of development — one on the Pacific coast and one on the Caribbean — are moving forward this month, offering the near-term additions to Colombia’s gas import infrastructure as domestic field production continues to decline.