Tuesday, May 5th, 2026
Colombia’s Energy and Gas Regulatory Commission (CREG) has launched what it describes as the first regulatory sandbox in its history, targeting the liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) market.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro and Venezuelan acting president Delcy Rodríguez declared energy integration the cornerstone of a revived bilateral relationship following a summit at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas on April 24.
With the poll results from the end of April and with less than a month to the first round of the presidential elections in Colombia, it looks increasingly probable that Iván Cepeda, the candidate of the current administration’s political movement, will be the next president of Colombia.
Canacol Energy, Colombia’s second-largest natural gas producer, has petitioned the Court of King’s Bench of Alberta — the Canadian province where the company is domiciled — for authorization to cancel its active gas supply contracts with multiple Colombian companies.
Colombia’s natural gas industry association Naturgas issued two complementary public statements in April, together painting an urgent picture of a sector caught between short-term supply pressure and a structurally inadequate long-term pipeline.
Two complementary reports published by Naturgas on April 24 cover the same strategic development from different angles: the operational details of the Frontera Energy-Ecopetrol regasification project at Puerto Bahía, and a site visit by Ecopetrol’s acting president to inspect progress firsthand.
Colombia’s energy regulator CREG has issued Resolution 102 023 of 2026, enabling the conversion of existing hydrocarbon infrastructure into natural gas pipelines and establishing a framework for remuneration of the associated investments.