The company Isa announced an investment plan of 25.5 trillion pesos from 2026 to 2030 in the markets it operates in Latin America, with 23% allocated to Colombia. In the 2025 earnings call, interim president Gabriel Melguizo highlighted progress on 29 infrastructure projects. The firm reported operational revenues of 16.03 trillion pesos, though net profit dropped 14% to 2.4 trillion.
In the 2025 earnings call, Gabriel Melguizo, Isa's interim president following the Council of State's annulment of Jorge Andrés Carrillo's appointment, outlined the company's financial metrics. Operational revenues reached 16.03 trillion pesos, while net profit declined 14% to 2.4 trillion pesos and EBITDA stood at 8.7 trillion, an 11% drop from two years prior. However, the stock price rose 48%, delivering a 55% return to shareholders.
Isa outlined its 2026-2030 investment plan totaling 25.5 trillion pesos across Latin American markets, with 5.8 trillion allocated to Colombia, accounting for 23% of the total. For 2026, investments are projected at 7.9 trillion pesos, up from 6.3 trillion in 2025, which was 31% higher than in 2024; Colombia received 19% of that amount.
In Colombia, the firm is involved in eight energy transmission tenders, focusing on the Caribbean region to enhance and expand services. Melguizo stated that “we have projections for investments in energy solutions, optimization in reinforcements, improvements to the Isa Energia Brasil network, and equipment replacement.” Currently, they are advancing on 29 projects: 26 for energy transmission and three for roads, adding nearly 5,000 kilometers and interventions on 296 kilometers.
Investments are allocated 78% to electric energy transmission, 13% to road concessions, 6% to smart energy solutions, and 3% to telecommunications. In 2025, Isa launched its 2040 strategy, aiming to consolidate electric transmission, accelerate new energy businesses, expand in roads, enter new geographies, multiply 2024 EBITDA, manage the portfolio, and contribute to operating communities.
In the Colombian market, they secured one connection contract and two expansions in 2025; positioned Transelca as a vehicle for local energy solutions; established Intercolombia as the main transmission operator; and created HI as a digital hub. Financially, dividends paid amounted to 1.4 trillion pesos, or 1,265 pesos per share. EBITDA grew about 8% due to new projects and higher yields, with 83% from energy generation. Colombia accounted for 27% of net profit, impacted by peso fluctuations.