Thursday, July 16th, 2026
Vice president-elect José Manuel Restrepo met with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the State Department on July 15 for a 45-minute bilateral meeting that both sides described as the opening of a new chapter in Colombia-US relations, one in which energy and hydrocarbons figured as a central substantive thread beneath the diplomatic framing.


Outgoing Mines and Energy Minister Edwin Palma used his public response to the designation of María Nohemí Arboleda as incoming minister on July 14th to signal what he considers the most urgent near-term briefing she needs: the scheduled maintenance of the SPEC regasification terminal in Cartagena, Colombia’s sole LNG import gateway, set for July 30th to August 3rd.
The four-administration comparison that Valora Analitik assembled from ANH data provides the clearest single chart of what four years of Petro energy policy cost Colombia in upstream investment momentum: not a decline, not a slowdown, but a complete stop.
A July 4th Semana analysis by its economics desk crystallizes the three converging energy emergencies that will define the de la Espriella administration’s first weeks: El Niño, the Canacol insolvency, and Air-e’s paralysis, each serious on its own, and compounding when combined.
Ecopetrol published its formal El Niño contingency plan on July 9, revealing the most consequential near-term contribution it can make to the national electricity system: two regasification projects that together will add 360 GBTUD of gas import capacity, equivalent to approximately 35% of national gas demand which could support up to 1,000 MW of additional thermoelectric generation through the critical dry season.
Three rural communities in Cartagena’s northern zone — Arroyo de Piedra, Arroyo Grande, and Arroyo de las Canoas — will receive piped natural gas service for the first time in their history, after Mayor Dumek Turbay Paz confirmed on July 6 that the Cartagena district government has secured the necessary resources through the Sistema General de Regalías.
Colombia’s oil and gas production data for May 2026, compiled by Acipet from ANH figures and reported by Valora Analitik on July 9, confirms that the sector’s decline is accelerating – and that the gas side of the ledger is deteriorating far faster than oil.