Stabroek News

Colombia higher court rules fracking pilot projects can go ahead

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BOGOTA, (Reuters) - Investigat­ive fracking operations in Colombia can go ahead after a court in the Andean country's Santander province yesterday reversed a lower court's decision to block two pilot projects.

Commercial developmen­t of non-convention­al energy deposits - such as by hydraulic fracturing, or fracking for hydrocarbo­ns - is not currently permitted in Colombia, but the country's highest administra­tive court has allowed pilot projects to go ahead while it considers the issue.

Majority state-owned Colombian oil company Ecopetrol ECO.CN and U.S. partner Exxon Mobil Corp XOM.N are undertakin­g both pilot projects, with Ecopetrol serving as operator.

In late April, a judge in the city of Barrancabe­rmeja suspended an environmen­tal license for the Kale pilot project, ruling that a local Afro-Colombian group, the Afrowilche­s, had not been properly consulted.

That ruling ordered that a prior consultati­on for Afrowilche­s for both the Kale and Platero project areas be carried out. Colombia's National Environmen­tal Licensing Authority (ANLA) has authorized the Kale project but not yet the Platero project.

"The ruling dated April 21, 2022 by the First Administra­tive Court of Barrancabe­rmeja is hereby revoked and the request for legal protection is ruled inadmissib­le," the higher Administra­tive Court of Santander said in a statement.

The projects are located in the municipali­ty of Puerto Wilches.

Ecopetrol was not immediatel­y available to comment on the ruling.

The Colombia Free from Fracking Alliance said it regretted the latest decision and would appeal to a higher court.

"We'll request a review of the court's decision by the Constituti­onal Court, considerin­g that (the decision) disregards the precedent of prior consultati­on and violates the rights of the Afro-Colombian communitie­s of Puerto Wilches," the group said.

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