Dr. Helena Vance, Science & Climate Correspondent
The political landscape in Colombia shifted decisively on Thursday as leftist candidate Gustavo Petro conceded defeat in a closely fought presidential election. The unexpected move sent shockwaves through global markets, but for British investors eyeing Latin America’s third-largest economy, the signal is one of steadying ground. The concession removes a major source of uncertainty that had been pricing risk into Colombian assets for months.
Petro’s campaign had promised sweeping reforms to the country’s energy sector, including a halt to new oil exploration and a rapid transition away from fossil fuels. For a nation where hydrocarbons account for nearly half of export revenues, such policies posed existential questions. The victor, conservative candidate Federico Gutiérrez, has pledged to maintain fiscal discipline, protect investor contracts, and continue existing climate commitments—albeit at a pace compatible with economic stability.
The immediate reaction was a rally in Colombian bonds and the peso. The yield on 10-year sovereign debt dropped 45 basis points. This is not merely a localised tremor; it reverberates through the global investment climate. Colombia is a bellwether for emerging market risk appetite. Its stabilisation suggests a recalibration of how investors perceive political risk in resource-rich nations grappling with the energy transition.
From a climate perspective, the outcome presents a layered narrative. Petro’s defeat does not mean a rejection of environmental action. Gutiérrez has endorsed the country’s commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 51 per cent by 2030. The difference lies in methodology. Where Petro sought to dismantle the fossil fuel industry, Gutiérrez favours a managed decline, using carbon pricing and green subsidies to wean the economy off oil. This pragmatic approach aligns more closely with what climate economists term the ‘wedge strategy’: using multiple levers to bend emissions curves without triggering economic collapse.
The real tension is temporal. The planet is warming at 0.2 degrees Celsius per decade. Each delay in decarbonisation locks in more irreversible change. But Colombia’s decision reflects a broader reality: nations at different stages of development must find their own pathways. A forced transition risks political backlash and policy reversal, as seen in other resource-rich democracies. The Gutiérrez administration has two years to demonstrate that incremental change can achieve sufficient emissions reductions before the next election cycle brings renewed pressure.
For British investors, the immediate calculus is straightforward. Colombia’s oil reserves, roughly 2 billion barrels, remain viable under current extraction rates for another six years. Meanwhile, the country has vast renewable potential: hydropower already supplies 70 per cent of electricity, and wind capacity in the Guajira region could power the entire Andean grid. The new government’s plan to auction offshore wind licences by 2024 opens a new frontier for capital deployment.
Globally, the investment climate is being reshaped by climate risk. The Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures has made mandatory reporting standard practice in London. Investors cannot ignore physical risks: the drought that reduced Colombia’s hydro output by 30 per cent in 2022 is a harbinger of more frequent extreme events. But they also face transition risks: stranded assets, policy shifts, and consumer preference changes. Gutiérrez’s victory does not eliminate these risks. It makes them more calculable.
I am seeing this pattern across the developing world: centrist administrations that accept climate science but reject revolutionary economics. This is not the pace many environmentalists demand. But it is the pace that markets can sustain without panic. The planet cannot afford panic. The biosphere collapse is already in its early stages: insect biomass down 75 per cent in some regions, coral reefs bleaching in half a degree warmer water, ice sheets losing mass at accelerating rates. We need dramatic action, yes. But we also need to bring capital along.
Colombia’s leftist concession is a data point in a larger geopolitical experiment. Can democracy manage the energy transition without tearing itself apart? The initial signal from Bogotá is cautiously positive. The country will remain a player in global energy markets for at least a decade. Its carbon intensity will decline, but not as fast as scientists recommend. Whether this holds over the long term depends on the next election, the next drought, and the next climate summit. For now, the risk rating has improved. The Earth’s temperature has not.
The British investment community should treat this as a reprieve, not a resolution. The underlying physics of the climate system remains unchanged. The only question is whether human governance can match the speed of atmospheric change. Today’s news suggests we are still lagging. But at least we are not lurching.








