Colombia · Energy
Key Facts
—The deal. Ecopetrol reached a final collective agreement with the Unión Sindical Obrera, its majority union, on June 13, 2026.
—The term. The new agreement runs for six years, effective from January 1, 2026.
—The effort. The company said the talks ran across more than 990 sessions before a deal was struck.
—The breadth. Ecopetrol also signed 66 separate agreements with other participating unions.
—The terms. The accord improves working conditions and health and education benefits, framed around cost discipline.
—The weight. The Colombian state owns about 88% of Ecopetrol, which supplies roughly a tenth of the national budget.
Ecopetrol, Colombia’s state oil company, has signed a six-year labour deal with its powerful main union, removing a strike threat that had hung for months over the country’s single most important source of public money.
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Ecopetrol is not just another company in Colombia. It is the backbone of the national finances, and a dispute inside it quickly becomes a problem for the whole country.
So a labour peace deal matters well beyond the oil fields. On June 13, the company reached a final collective agreement with its largest union, ending a long and tense negotiation.
What the Ecopetrol deal contains
The agreement is with the Unión Sindical Obrera, the oil workers’ union that holds the company’s main collective contract. It runs for six years, backdated to the start of 2026.
The company described a marathon process, with more than nine hundred and ninety bargaining sessions before the two sides reached terms. Alongside it, Ecopetrol signed sixty-six further agreements with other unions.
On substance, the company said the deal improves working conditions and strengthens health and education benefits. It framed the package around its principles of reasonableness and cost discipline.
The agreement still has to be filed with the labour ministry. The company and the union then plan joint sessions around the country to explain what was agreed.
Why a strike threat loomed so large
The backdrop is a turbulent stretch for the company. Over recent months the union had repeatedly raised the prospect of a production-halting strike during a leadership crisis at the top of Ecopetrol.
A strike at the company is not a contained event. Ecopetrol produces the bulk of Colombia’s oil and meets most of its gas demand, so any stoppage ripples straight into supply and into state revenue.
The state owns about eighty-eight percent of the company. Through taxes, dividends and royalties, Ecopetrol funds roughly a tenth of the national budget, which makes its stability a matter of public finance.
Settling a six-year contract takes that risk off the table for a long stretch. For a government wrestling with a tight fiscal position, that predictability is worth a great deal.
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What it means for investors
For people watching Colombian risk from abroad, the deal is a modest piece of good news in a year that has brought little of it for the company. Rating agencies cut Ecopetrol earlier in 2026, citing government interference.
A long labour agreement does not fix those wider worries about politics and governance. But it does remove one concrete and damaging threat, and it locks in labour costs for years to come.
The company is a sprawling group, not a single oil field. Beyond Colombian crude and gas, it holds power-transmission businesses across the region and operations stretching to the United States and Brazil.
That reach is exactly why labour stability carries weight. A workforce of more than nineteen thousand sits behind a company whose dividends regularly account for a large share of what the state collects.
The union itself is a national institution with deep roots in Colombia’s oil history. Its ability to call a stoppage gives it real leverage, which is why a settled, multi-year contract counts as a meaningful outcome.
The next steps are administrative. Once the deal is filed with the labour ministry, the company and union plan to tour the country explaining the terms to workers.
The bigger questions about the company’s direction remain open, from asset sales to its push abroad. This is factual context rather than investment advice, and it points to calmer ground on at least one front.
For now, the headline is simple. Colombia’s most important company has bought itself six years of labour peace, and the country’s finances rest a little easier for it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did Ecopetrol agree with its union?
It reached a final collective agreement with the Unión Sindical Obrera, its majority union, on June 13, 2026. The deal runs for six years from the start of 2026 and improves working conditions and health and education benefits.
Why does this matter for Colombia?
Ecopetrol funds about a tenth of the national budget and produces most of Colombia’s oil. Removing the threat of a production-halting strike protects both energy supply and the public finances that depend on the company.
Does the deal fix Ecopetrol’s wider problems?
It does not. Concerns about government interference and governance, which prompted ratings downgrades earlier in 2026, remain unresolved alongside larger questions about the company’s direction.
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