Big firms abandon wind energy plans in Colombia amid regulatory shifts,
social issues and grid gaps
[June 04, 2025] By
STEVEN GRATTAN
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombia’s ambitious plans for wind energy
development, especially in the resource-rich La Guajira region, are
facing serious setbacks as major companies pull out and projects stall,
industry experts say.
Margarita Nieves, director of the Colombian Offshore Wind Research
Network, told The Associated Press that despite large targets —
including 1.1 gigawatts awarded in a 2019 auction — only two wind farms
are partially operating today, with a combined capacity of less than 32
megawatts.
Colombia’s Mining and Energy Planning Unit estimates the country could
generate up to 18 gigawatts of wind energy — nearly double the nation’s
current installed electricity capacity of 20 gigawatts.
Several companies brought equipment and infrastructure to Colombia
around 2021 before securing permits, but parks remain unbuilt. Key
obstacles include limited grid connection infrastructure in La Guajira,
recent regulatory changes that reduce financial returns and complex
social and leadership challenges.
Colombia, Latin America’s third-most populous country, has pledged to
reach net-zero emissions by 2050. President Gustavo Petro, the country’s
first leftist leader, presents himself as an environmentalist and
advocate of a just energy transition. Yet Colombia remains deeply
reliant on fossil fuels — oil is its top export and a major source of
government revenue.

In 2023, Italian multinational Enel withdrew from the Windpeshi onshore
wind energy project in La Guajira. By late 2024, EDP Renewables canceled
two major projects, Alpha and Beta, two large-scale onshore wind farms
in the same region. In May, Colombian state-owned oil company Ecopetrol
acquired nine solar and wind energy projects from Norway’s Statkraft,
marking the European firm’s exit from the country. The portfolio spans
La Guajira, Sucre, Cordoba, Caldas, and Magdalena, with a combined
potential capacity of 1.3 gigawatts. Only one project is currently
operational, with others expected to come online between 2026 and 2027.
The move is part of Ecopetrol’s broader energy transition strategy to
reduce reliance on oil and gas and meet net-zero goals by 2050. However,
challenges like regulatory delays, governance concerns, and potential
impacts on Colombia’s fiscal stability raise questions about the
transition’s pace and economic effects.
Nieves warned that the situation is “very concerning,” with only two of
over 20 planned projects advancing. She stressed the need to speed up
regulatory processes, improve consultations with Indigenous communities
— notably the Wayuu in La Guajira — and ensure sufficient electrical
infrastructure.
The delays also threaten Colombia’s offshore wind ambitions
“Colombia has more than 20 years of delay in wind energy,” Nieves said.
“Brazil, in contrast, has built over 1,300 onshore wind farms in the
last two decades and is a top global turbine producer."

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Wind turbines operate near a Wayuu Indigenous cemetery on the
outskirts of Cabo de la Vela, Colombia, Feb. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Ivan
Valencia, File)
 The wind energy projects were part
of Colombia’s just energy transition, aiming to replace fossil fuels
with renewables while supporting vulnerable groups like Indigenous
peoples. The region is home to Cerrejon, one of the largest open-pit
coal mines in the world and a major player in Latin America’s mining
sector, which has been in operation since 1985. The mine has just
nine years left in its life span, and its closure, without
alternative plans in place, will deal a significant blow to the
region’s economy.
Resistance to projects with Indigenous communities
For Samuel Lanao, head of La Guajira’s environmental authority, the
main reason several licensed renewable energy projects are being
sold off is because companies struggle with deep-rooted social
tensions, particularly during the prior consultation process with
local Indigenous communities. Lanao said confrontations have emerged
between firms and residents, derailing expectations of development.
“This has been a major blow to La Guajira,” he said, “as there were
high hopes for economic and social progress through these projects.”
The Wayuu people, a seminomadic Indigenous group in the arid La
Guajira region of northern Colombia and Venezuela, remain divided
over wind energy development. While some have welcomed the economic
support offered by companies building turbines on their ancestral
lands, many others have raised concerns over environmental and
cultural impacts, and a lack of meaningful prior consultation, in
what is one of Colombia’s poorest regions.

Diego Patron, manager of the Jemeiwaa Ka’I wind project, a
large-scale wind farm cluster in La Guajira, acknowledged the
pioneering nature of Colombia’s early wind efforts, which began in a
regulatory vacuum without clear institutional frameworks.
“These foundational projects faced a steep institutional and
territorial learning curve, resulting in the loss of key strategic
projects,” Patron said. “However, their legacy now forms the
cornerstone for new initiatives."
Patron believes that barriers around legitimate Wayuu community
representation, environmental permitting, and contract resolutions
have been overcome, creating more stable conditions.”
Patron said misinformation deepened tensions and unfairly damaged
firms like EDP that, he says, aimed to support communities.
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