Thursday, May 28th, 2026
NG Energy International Corp. (TSX: GASX) has announced successful drilling results for the Aruchara-5 development well at its María Conchita block on Colombia’s Caribbean coast, where the company holds an 80% working interest.


Colombia’s incoming president will inherit an energy sector caught between two urgent imperatives – accelerating the shift away from fossil fuels while preserving the oil revenues and supply security the country still depends on.
SPEC LNG, the Promigas-owned regasification terminal at Cartagena, has issued a statement disputing a CoP$427 million fine imposed by the Superintendencia de Servicios Públicos Domiciliarios (SuperServicios) over the accuracy of its financial reporting,
Colombia’s fiscal crisis has pushed hydrocarbon policy to the center of the 2026 presidential campaign, forcing every major candidate — regardless of ideology — to grapple with the same uncomfortable arithmetic: the country’s public finances depend heavily on oil revenues, even as the sector faces declining reserves and mounting pressure over energy security.
The oil and gas services industry body Campetrol delivered a bleak April snapshot that captures Colombia’s gas predicament in two simultaneous trends pulling in opposite directions: imports hit a record high while the drilling activity needed to reverse the country’s declining domestic production fell further.
Promigas’s Q1 2026 investor presentation reveals that the SPEC LNG regasification terminal in Cartagena is carrying a larger share of Colombia’s gas system than any previously published figure had indicated — and that the company is moving to expand its capacity before the end of the year.
The public utilities industry body Andesco issued a formal warning on May 21 that Colombia has a critical and non-extendable window of three to four months to take regulatory and operational action before El Niño drives the country into an energy supply crisis.