Colombian government officials in Montería urgently coordinate flood response for Córdoba, with maps of inundated areas from heavy rains and Urrá reservoir.
Colombian government officials in Montería urgently coordinate flood response for Córdoba, with maps of inundated areas from heavy rains and Urrá reservoir.
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Government addresses floods in Córdoba amid climate crisis

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The Colombian government holds a Council of Ministers in Montería to coordinate responses to floods in Córdoba, triggered by heavy rains and discharges from the Urrá reservoir. Urrá's board appointed Enrique Kerguelen Méndez as interim president after Julián Acevedo's resignation, amid criticism from President Gustavo Petro. Proposals include a new economic emergency and use of unspent royalties to address the crisis.

In Montería, Córdoba, on February 10, 2026, President Gustavo Petro led a Council of Ministers to assess the emergency from floods affecting 24 of 30 municipalities in the department. Intense rains, unusual for February according to the Ideam, have raised reservoir levels like Urrá to 103.34%, Ituango to 99.66%, and Calima to 98.32%, per XM data.

The Urrá hydroelectric plant conducted discharges into the Sinú River to protect its infrastructure and communities from greater flooding, but this sparked controversy. President Petro labeled the actions a 'environmental crime' on his X account and demanded the manager's immediate resignation, stating: 'The manager must resign immediately and assume his penal responsibilities.' The ANLA reported that Urrá exceeded maximum permitted levels on 21% of days between 2020 and 2024, rising to 30% in 2025. The Superintendence of Public Services noted that in January 2026, Urrá surpassed limits for 15 of 31 days.

Julián Acevedo resigned hours after Petro's statements, citing pressures from the climate crisis. Urrá's board appointed Enrique Kerguelen Méndez, a civil engineer from Universidad de los Andes with experience at the entity since 1996, as interim president. Acevedo defended the measures, arguing that 'without the reservoir, the catastrophe would have been much greater' and that Urrá has controlled 97% of floods since 2000.

To fund the response, Finance Minister Germán Ávila announced a new economic emergency declaration to raise $8 trillion via a patrimony tax on companies over 200,000 UVT. Governors, led by Córdoba's Erasmo Zuleta Bechara, proposed using unspent royalties over $6 trillion from environment and science sectors. The Ministry of Mines and Energy urged generators to lower energy prices due to high reservoir levels, and the Ministry of Transport is monitoring roads for landslides.

Petro denounced some politicians using government aid for electoral campaigning, calling it 'electoral shamelessness.' Banco Agrario activated financial relief for 23,342 clients in Córdoba, with extensions up to 180 days on $351 billion in credits.

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On X, discussions focus on the Colombian government's response to severe floods in Córdoba from heavy rains and Urrá reservoir discharges, including a Council of Ministers in Montería, new economic emergency proposals, unspent royalties use, and Urrá leadership change after resignation amid Petro's criticism. Sentiments vary: supporters blame past mismanagement, paramilitaries, and political opportunism while praising aid; critics accuse the Petro administration of negligence and slow response; neutral posts urge urgent relief and investigations into reservoir operations.

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Flooded towns in Chaco province, Argentina, with submerged streets, stranded vehicles, evacuating residents, and heavy rain from extreme storm.
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Extreme rains flood towns in Chaco province interior

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A storm with record rainfall over 300 mm hit Chaco province interior on April 20, leaving towns underwater, roads impassable and several emergencies. Espinillo recorded 320 mm, while a factory in Juan José Castelli was flooded affecting 45 workers. The National Meteorological Service maintains an orange alert for storms.

Colombia's Contraloría General de la República reported that Decree 0150 of 2026, declaring an economic emergency in February due to the climate crisis, lacks solid calculation bases for requesting between $8.26 and $8.68 trillion pesos. The oversight body identified discrepancies in damage estimates, such as flooded areas, and the absence of a national articulated plan. This review responds to a request from the Constitutional Court.

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Following extreme rains that flooded northern Chaco towns, Governor Leandro Zdero visited Juan José Castelli to oversee assistance, as the provincial government deploys aid across affected areas. Senator Jorge Capitanich calls for national water emergency, while Frente Chaqueño proposes 180-day provincial emergency.

Colombia’s Mines and Energy Minister Edwin Palma defended his handling of the Air-e financial crisis—ongoing since early 2026 with $1.6 trillion in debts—and announced key steps: a targeted $8/kWh surcharge on high-income users, a Creg proposal for more energy contracting ahead of El Niño, and calls for structural reforms in the Caribbean region's electricity sector.

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Colombia's Constitutional Court declared unfounded the recusals by several magistrates to review the economic emergency decree, which includes a wealth tax to address the winter crisis in Córdoba. The full chamber will continue its analysis tomorrow, April 29, after six magistrates recused themselves the previous day. Business leaders and President Gustavo Petro have reacted to the judicial review.

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