U.S. Intervention in Venezuela Could Help Solve Colombia’s Energy Crisis

Colombia’s natural gas production is spiraling ever lower, with the hydrocarbon sector impacted by tax hikes and leftist President Gustavo Petro’s reforms aimed at weaning the country off its dependence on fossil fuels. This forced Bogota to significantly boost costly liquified petroleum gas (LPG) imports to meet domestic demand and ensure the stability of Colombia’s…


U.S. Intervention in Venezuela Could Help Solve Colombia’s Energy Crisis
U.S. Intervention in Venezuela Could Help Solve Colombia’s Energy Crisis

Colombia’s natural gas production is spiraling ever lower, with the hydrocarbon sector impacted by tax hikes and leftist President Gustavo Petro’s reforms aimed at weaning the country off its dependence on fossil fuels. This forced Bogota to significantly boost costly liquified petroleum gas (LPG) imports to meet domestic demand and ensure the stability of Colombia’s electricity grid. Those imports are straining government finances and the economy at a time of fiscal crisis. Nonetheless, U.S. President Donald Trump’s intervention in Venezuela has created an alternative, more cost-effective solution.

Colombia’s economically vital natural gas production has been in free fall for years. For January 2026, the Andean country’s natural gas output fell to a multi-decade low of 683 million cubic feet per day. While this is just over 1% lower than a month prior it is a shocking 17% less than the same period a year earlier.

Colombia
Colombia


Source: National Hydrocarbons Agency (ANH).

There are signs that Colombia’s natural gas output will continue falling despite the belief that recent discoveries, notably the Sirus 1 and 2 wells in the GUA-OFF-0 block, could bolster reserves by up to 6 trillion cubic feet.

A lack of investment in drilling activity, along with Petro’s decision to cease issuing new exploration and production contracts, is weighing on natural gas reserves as well as production. At the end of 2024, Colombia possessed reserves of 2.064 trillion cubic feet, which, at the current rate of production, is only sufficient for another 5.9 years. Around 70% of those reserves are associated with oil production. As Colombia’s oilfields age and decline rates rise, there is growing pressure on drillers to implement enhanced recovery techniques, one of the lowest cost being gas injection.

Natural gas produced alongside oil is reinjected into wells to boost reservoir pressure and reduce viscosity, making it easier and more efficient to lift the petroleum. As demand for enhanced recovery grows, because of Colombia’s aging oilfields, less associated natural gas is available for commercial production, further heightening domestic supply constraints. Those diminished reserves, along with production falling to multi-decade lows, pose a threat to Colombia’s economy, where the fossil fuel has long been a cost-effective alternative to other sources of energy.

This also jeopardizes the stability of the Andean country’s electricity grid, which is increasingly dependent on gas-fired power plants, especially during times of low rainfall, which impacts water levels at Colombia’s hydroelectric facilities. You see, more than 60% of Colombia’s electricity is generated by hydro-plants, with output falling sharply whenever water levels decline because of poor hydrology from reduced rainfall.

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