Colombia reports US$401 million trade surplus with Africa

At the Celac-Africa High-Level Forum, Trade, Industry and Tourism Minister Diana Marcela Morales highlighted a US$401 million trade surplus with Africa at the end of 2025, a 73% increase from the previous year. Morales stressed the potential of economic ties with the continent and concrete progress in that area.

Diana Marcela Morales, Colombia's Minister of Trade, Industry and Tourism, spoke at the Celac-Africa High-Level Forum to underscore trade ties with the African continent. She stated that at the end of 2025, Colombia recorded a US$401 million trade surplus with Africa, marking a 73% increase from the prior year. “We are advancing concrete actions to deepen this relationship,” Morales said at the event, which Uruguayan President Yamandú Orsi attended by traveling to Colombia for the Celac summit. The mining-energy sector led exports with US$296.5 million, accounting for 46.6% of total shipments to Africa last year. Rising products include coffee, bananas, and machinery. Morales noted that over 160 Colombian companies currently export to the continent, showing tangible economic growth. “This demonstrates that this link goes beyond diplomatic aspirations and solidifies as an expanding economic reality,” she added. Key progress includes negotiations for a memorandum of understanding with Kenya. Since 2022, Colombia has promoted market diversification toward Africa through economic diplomacy and new logistics routes. The minister concluded that the forum marks the start of a new strategic integration phase based on trade, investment, and shared value creation, shaping a complementary economic geography between Latin America and Africa.

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Illustration depicting Colombia-Ecuador border standoff amid 100% tariff hikes on imports.
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Colombia to raise tariffs on Ecuadorian imports to 100%

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Colombia's Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism, Diana Marcela Morales Rojas, rejected Ecuador's trade measures and announced that the country will raise tariffs on imports from Ecuador to 100%. The move responds to Ecuador's announced increase of its tariff on Colombian products to 100%, citing border security issues. Business leaders from both nations called for presidential dialogue to avert economic harm.

The free trade agreement between Colombia and the United States marks 14 years and has enabled US$186.051 million in exports since 2012. US investment reached US$41.753 million over the same period.

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Colombia's exports reached US$4.211.6 million in February, up 11.4%, according to the Dane. Non-monetary gold and the agricultural sector drove the rise, while fuels, coal, and manufacturing saw declines.

In the ongoing Colombia-Ecuador tariff dispute, Colombia's Ministry of Commerce issued Decree 0455 on April 28, 2026, imposing tariffs of 35%, 50%, or 75% on 191 products from Ecuador—up from prior 30% measures—to counter Ecuador's 100% 'security tariffs.' Zero tariffs remain on essential inputs without substitutes. The decree awaits publication in the Official Gazette on April 30 for immediate effect.

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