Analysis: Colombia's extractive industries watching election warily
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[June 08, 2022]
By Oliver Griffin
BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's leftist
firebrand presidential candidate Gustavo Petro is too close in recent
polls for the comfort of oil companies and miners who worry that his
promised policies would imperil Colombia's economy and energy
self-sufficiency, high-ranking industry figures and business
associations said.
Petro, currently a senator, told a rally last month that coal and oil
are akin to cocaine: "Our three main exports are poisons." He has won
support vowing profound change, including social and economic reform in
Colombia, where about half the population lives in some form of poverty.
Petro favors an economy that depends on agriculture rather than
extractive industries, leading the Andean country's oil and gas and
mining sectors to rally behind his rival, the construction magnate
Rodolfo Hernandez who posted a surprise second place finish behind Petro
in the election's first round.
Petro has promised to stop new exploration for hydrocarbons and
construction of new large-scale open-pit mines, and to put an end to
investigative fracking pilots and offshore oil and gas projects, some of
which already have contracts. The industry has stressed that the income
it generates is vital for funding any election promises.
Hernandez, a former mayor, has provided scant detail on energy and
mining policies but is widely seen as pro-business. He has urged
investment in renewable energy as well as efforts to increase oil and
gas reserves.
Petro topped the first-round with 40.3% of votes cast, and trails
Hernandez by just a few points in recent polls ahead of a run-off in
June.
Some in the industry believe Petro will not be able to slow their
operations anytime soon, since the government of current President Ivan
Duque has signed 69 exploration and production contracts during bidding
rounds.
Petro promises a stark departure from policies of Duque, whose term ends
in August, and sources in both oil and coal mining fear a Petro
government would make it harder to advance permits to further develop
existing operations.
"This is a resilient sector (but) it is inevitable that it will lag in
the face of adverse policies or low prices," a high-ranking oil and gas
industry source said.
Oil and mining combined provide more than 50% of Colombia's monthly
exports, according to government figures, and up to 8% of gross domestic
product.
Industry figures largely declined to be quoted by name or have their
companies identified, saying they feared possible blowback. One said
that if Petro wins, he must accept that income generated by mining is
vital to funding social programs, which he has pledged to re-vamp to
correct profound inequality.
"He'll be a little more aware of how necessary the mining and energy
sector is, to be able to continue investing in all the country's
subsidies," the person said.
At the end of last year Colombia had oil reserves equivalent to 7.6
years of consumption and eight years worth of gas, according to
government figures.
The Colombian Petroleum Association, an industry group, has warned an
end to new oil and gas contracts would endanger energy self-sufficiency
and herald a costlier future of energy imports. It would not comment on
individual candidates.
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Posters with the image of Colombian left-wing presidential candidate
Gustavo Petro, of the Historic Pact coalition are pictured ahead the
second round of elections in Bogota, Colombia June 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Luisa Gonzalez
An oil and gas industry source who declined to be
named told Reuters they would much prefer Hernandez.
"The first round was encouraging," the source said, adding the
industry could survive a hostile government.
"A four-year hiatus on bidding rounds will not be the
death of the industry," the source said, adding everyone has "more
than enough (oil and gas) blocks to be getting on with."
It is unlikely Petro could reverse contracts that have already been
awarded, but sources in oil and mining worried he could increase red
tape.
Both candidates have said they oppose fracking for hydrocarbons but
anti-fracking activists are leery of Hernandez. A former mayor of
Bucaramanga, the capital of the province where two investigative
fracking pilot projects are set to take place, he had initially
supported the endeavors.
"We hope that whoever becomes president, that their commitment to
the environment translates into suspension of the pilots and the
prohibition of (fracking) in Colombia," said Carlos Santiago from
the Colombia Free from Fracking Alliance.
Majority state-owned oil company Ecopetrol, which will operate the
pilot projects, and partner Exxon Mobil declined to comment on the
candidates' positions.
"IRRESPONSIBLE AND DISRESPECTFUL"
The Colombian Mining Association (ACM) was furious after Petro
linked coal to cocaine, calling it "irresponsible and above all
disrespectful," in a message its president Juan Camilo Narino shared
with journalists.
Colombia is a major coal exporter and shipped almost 60 million
tonnes in 2021, according to the government's DANE statistics
agency. Narino said mining is essential to Colombia and the world.
Colombia would have to grow its agricultural sector six times to
match the economic contribution of mining, according to the ACM.
If Petro wins, mining operations "are going to suffer serious
slow-downs, serious setbacks that really scare the investors," said
a source who asked to remain anonymous.
Hernandez, by contrast, would be "good for the (mining) sector, good
for the private sector," the source said.
However, with Petro and Hernandez both emphasizing the need for
renewable energy, things could be looking up for copper exploration
efforts, said Collective Mining executive vice-president Ana Milena
Vasquez.
"Both candidates propose an organized energy transition and we're
convinced that, due to copper's importance, the exploration of this
base metal will receive support from the next government," Vasquez
said.
(Reporting by Oliver Griffin; Additional reporting by Julia Symmes
Cobb; Editing by Christian Plumb and David Gregorio)
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