Over 21% of gas consumed in January was imported

In January 2026, imported gas accounted for 21% of total consumption in Colombia, according to Upme data. This figure highlights the rising trend in imports due to declining local reserves, as warned by Naturgas, which forecasts 26% by year's end.

Colombia's energy sector is seeing a rise in natural gas imports, driven by a 64% drop in proven reserves over the past 13 years, according to Sergio Cabrales, a professor at Universidad de los Andes. Domestic supply has declined from over 1,000 gigas BTU per day in previous years to 667 Gbtud in 2026, increasing reliance on foreign supplies.

In January 2026, imported gas met 21% of total consumption, up three percentage points from 18% in January 2025. Cabrales notes that this pushes up supply costs, affecting user tariffs and posing risks to energy security.

On the demand side, industrial users have shifted to alternative energy sources due to price and availability issues, curbing gas consumption. Thermoelectric demand is also at lows, thanks to high hydroelectric reservoir levels averaging 77.97% as of February 15. Seven reservoirs exceed 90%, including Urrá, Ituango, and Calima, which are near 99%, aided by unusual rainfall from a cold front.

Naturgas had previously warned that imports could reach 26% of consumption by the end of 2026, given the local supply shortage.

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Colombia's thermal power plants are gearing up to boost liquefied natural gas imports ahead of El Niño's expected arrival in August, which could deplete hydroelectric reservoirs. Alejandro Castañeda, director of Andeg, said the Spec terminal will run at full capacity to support the grid. The move aims to prevent blackouts during the dry season.

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Alberto García of Drummond Energy warned that Colombia's energy demand could double by 2030 if economic growth stays between 4% and 5% of GDP.

Trade groups Andeg and Fenalcarbón stressed the need for long-term contracts and coal-fired thermal plants as backup for Colombia's power grid, with El Niño likely in the second half of 2026. Alejandro Castañeda, Andeg president, and Carlos Cante, from Fenalcarbón, warned of growing energy deficits and climate vulnerabilities.

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President Gustavo Petro defended Colombia's transition to clean energies, stating that oil exploration contracts from the last decade have not found large amounts of oil. He insisted on lowering the real interest rate to boost the economy. He highlighted advances like investments in solar substations and potential exports.

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