Monday, May 11th, 2026
The Unión de Trabajadores de la Industria Petrolera y Energética de Colombia (UTIPEC) has filed a formal complaint with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), alleging that Ecopetrol is undergoing a process of decapitalization driven by governance failures and politically motivated energy policy decisions.


Óscar Bravo, chief executive of Terpel — Colombia’s dominant fuel distributor with roughly 43% of the service station market – used an interview with Valora Analitik to lay out a decade-long growth plan that is as much about surviving the energy transition as it is about selling more gasoline.
Carlos Mazeneth, chief executive of Efigas, the natural gas distributor serving Colombia’s Eje Cafetero region, has issued a blunt warning about the commercial toll of the country’s growing dependence on imported gas: higher molecule costs are driving industrial customers away, directly eroding the company’s bottom line.
Colombia’s Finance Minister Germán Ávila has confirmed the convening of an Extraordinary Shareholders’ Assembly to make what he described as “some adjustments” to Ecopetrol’s board of directors. If the changes go ahead, the board will have been reorganized nine times in under four years — an unprecedented pace for a company of Ecopetrol’s strategic weight.
Ahead of its May 12 results release, Ecopetrol has published preliminary estimates for Q1 2026 that point to net profit of between CoP$2T and CoP$3T — a range that, if confirmed, would mark eleven consecutive quarters of year-on-year earnings decline (in pesos) since the peak of early 2023.
GeoPark used its 1Q26 operational update to reinforce a message it has been building since late 2025: that the company has turned a corner.
Moody’s has downgraded Oleoducto Central S.A. (Ocensa) one notch to Ba2 with a negative outlook, in a move that reflects the rating agency’s discomfort with the structural ties binding Colombia’s principal crude pipeline to its financially troubled majority shareholder – rather than any deterioration in Ocensa’s own operations.