Colombia produced an estimated 968,000 b/d of crude oil in July, down by 4pc from 1,008,000 b/d in June, and down by 5.4pc from 1,023,000 b/d in July 2013, according to estimates from the country's national hydrocarbons agency (ANH).
The decline largely reflects escalating rebel attacks on pipelines and other infrastructure that regularly shut in production.
Colombia produced 1.072bn ft3/d (30mn m3/d) of natural gas in July, down by 3.2pc from 1.108bn ft3/d in June, and down by 10.1pc from 1.193bn ft3/d in the same month last year, according to the ANH estimates that were obtained by Argus.
Aside from chronic security threats, Colombia´s oil industry has not seen any major new discoveries in recent years.
In a report issued last month, the Colombian oil chamber (ACP) said the country's long-term production would average of 830,000 b/d for the next 10 years, barring some big new finds and an improvement in the security climate.
Under the ACP´s optimistic scenario, production would average 1.05mn b/d, essentially flat with current output.
Turnout in the country´s recent upstream licensing round was lukewarm. On 12 August, the ANH leased 26 blocks to 19 companies in a first phase, out of 95 blocks on offer. Winners included ExxonMobil, Shell and Spain´s Repsol.
The agency held a second phase auction for unawarded blocks on 20 August, in which Colombian independent Clean Energy Resources won the Chocó 1 onshore conventional block.
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