Colombia stepping up oil, coal production amid Russia sanctions -energy minister
14 Jun 2022
TORONTO, June 13 (Reuters) - Colombia is
set to increase coal and petroleum production as it steps up to fill the void
created by sanctions against Russia, Energy Minister Diego Mesa said on Monday.
The Andean county has restarted coal
exports to Ireland, Mesa said on the sidelines of Canada’s PDAC conference in
Toronto.
The European country stopped buying
Colombian coal in 2016 on human rights concerns.
“Six years ago Ireland had replaced
Colombian coal with Russian coal ... but at the beginning of the war they came
knocking at our doors again,” Mesa said.
The demand for coal is so high that
mining companies like Drummond, one of Colombia’s largest producers, have
managed to secure contracts for the next 18 months, Mesa said.
Poland has signed for one million tonnes
of coal from Drummond and is expected to place a contract for an additional two
million tonnes, he said.
Colombia has also increased its coal
exports to the Netherlands, Spain and Canada since Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine, he added.
Mesa said he expects Colombian oil
production to reach at least 800,000 barrels per day by end of this year and up
to 900,000 barrels per day by 2023.
“Any excess production will be put to
international use,” he said.
Colombians will vote in a second round
of presidential elections on Sunday to replace President Ivan Duque, who cannot
run again.
Gustavo Petro, a former M-19 guerrilla
and current senator, is tied in polling with Rodolfo Hernandez, an ex-mayor
running on anti-corruption promises.
Petro has said he will respect
already-signed contracts for oil and mining but will not sign new ones,
rattling many in the energy industry.
Oil and mining combined provide more
than 50% of Colombia’s monthly exports, according to government figures.
Hernandez is seen as pro-business but,
like Petro, has said he will not back commercial use of fracking.
Mesa said Colombia’s record of rule of
law will continue and signed contracts will be respected regardless of who
wins. (Reporting by Divya Rajagopal; editing by Richard Pullin)