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Colombia court orders activities at Uchuva-2 gas well be suspended

A court in Colombia has ordered the nation's bulk stateowned energy company Ecopetrol and Brazilian partner Petrobras to halt activities at the Uchuva2 offshore gas well.

In a court order dated Sept. 11, a judge said activities at the well, on the Tayrona block in Colombia's Caribbean, must stop after the companies stopped working to appropriately speak with a regional Native neighborhood about the operation.

The ruling represents the latest chapter in Colombia's long history of stress between successive governments and Native groups over energy projects, which the communities typically state infringe on their rights or threaten their way of life.

It is likewise another blow to the government of President Gustavo Petro, which has actually struggled to lighten worries that the Andean nation is on course to end up being ever-more based on gas imports as existing reserves diminish.

The court ordered that a free and prior assessment with the Indigenous Council of Taganga regarding exploration and production at the well must occur within one month.

This assessment needs to be performed in accordance with global and constitutional requirements, guaranteeing the effective participation of the Indigenous Council of Taganga neighborhood in all stages of the process, the ruling specified.

The court likewise purchased that the nationwide authority for ecological licenses (ANLA) and the environment ministry should carry out a brand-new impact research study for the task within a period of four months.

Ecopetrol and Petrobras must also stop using the name Uchuva - to name a few terms - when discussing the project and need to abstain from utilizing names or signs from Native culture without approval, the court included.

The Tayrona block is run by Petrobras, which has a. 44.4% stake, while Ecopetrol holds the staying 55.6%. Neither. company instantly reacted to ask for remark.

(source: Reuters)