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Carlyle sells SierraCol, a Colombian oil company, to Prime Infrastructure Philippines

Carlyle sells SierraCol, a Colombian oil company, to Prime Infrastructure Philippines
Carlyle sells SierraCol, a Colombian oil company, to Prime Infrastructure Philippines

Carlyle, a private equity firm in the United States, announced on Wednesday that it had agreed to sell its Colombian oil producer SierraCol, to Prime Infrastructure Capital, an infrastructure division of Filipino businessman, Enrique K.?Jr. Sources told 2025 that Carlyle had asked for $1.5 billion to buy the Colombian company, SierraCol, after it bought assets from Occidental Petroleum in 2020. In the oil and natural gas sector, Carlyle reached an initial, non-binding agreement in January to purchase most of the international assets of sanctioned Russian firm Lukoil, and merge Moeve, its European refining company, with Galp, a Portuguese energy firm's downstream business.

"This is an area where we have a strong track record and I plan to continue this." Bob Maguire, co-head of Carlyle International Energy Partners CIEP, said that we?have a playbook to execute complex carve outs and strengthen?these businesses.

He said CIEP has no set views on the amount of investment that should be allocated to upstream or downstream acquisitions.

Parminder Singh, CIEP's managing director, said that the market is a difficult one to operate in because major oil and gas companies are keen to increase their reserves of oil and natural gas while reducing spending on low-carbon projects.

Carlyle has said that it has invested $1 billion in SierraCol, mostly on existing assets. This is to stabilize the net production of around 45,000 barrels per day.

SierraCol's daily production of 77,000 barrels equivalent to oil is around 10% of Colombia's total production.

According to SierraCol's website, the company had a net debt of 618 million dollars and a free cashflow of $205 million for the twelve months ending October 2025.

Prime Infrastructure manages energy, water and waste infrastructure. (Reporting and editing by Tomasz Janovowski; Shadia Nasralla is the reporter)

(source: Reuters)