Colombia’s president Gustavo Petro announced last week that his government will “withdraw from the international investment arbitration system because the courts end up resolving disputes in favor of private entities”.
The move follows an open letter to Petro from 200 international economists – among them Nobel prize winner Joseph Stiglitz and French economist Thomas Piketty – calling for the country to leave the Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) system to “ensure that it does not stand in the way of its transition away from fossil fuels”.
The ISDS system allows investors – many linked to fossil fuel projects – to sue governments in an international arbitration court over disputes. This mechanism has been used by polluting companies to challenge environmental measures.
“Why do we agree to sign contracts where, in the event of a dispute, it is a private arbitration center in the contractor’s country that ultimately decides whether our country is in the right or not, and, generally speaking, we lose?” Petro said on March 25.
The Colombian president added that several other countries, including the United States, have left or are in the process of leaving this system. In Europe, for example, many governments have started the process of leaving the Energy Charter Treaty, an energy investment mechanism, in an attempt to prevent it from shielding fossil fuel projects.
“I undoubtedly believe we have opened a global debate, not just a Colombian one”, he told an event in Bogota held to launch a report on his government’s economic reforms and their results.
Signatories to the open letter celebrated the move but warned that withdrawing from the system is a complex process and would be easier if it was coordinated with other countries, particularly those in the Global North.
Kyla Tienhaara, Canada Research Chair in Economy and Environment and Associate Professor at Queen’s University, said “it would be preferable for ISDS access to end immediately, which means coordinated action among states.”
She added that such a “coalition of the willing” could set terms on ending treaties in an efficient way, or modify them in a way that removes ISDS protections.
Mario Osorio, Research Fellow at the American think tank Center for Economic Policy and Research (CERP) and also a signatory of the open letter, said in a statement that he hoped that Colombia will now “help to lead other countries in exiting ISDS”, which has “too often stood in the way of needed measures to mitigate climate change”.
High exposure to lawsuits
Harro van Asselt, professor of Climate Law at the University of Cambridge, told Climate Home News that it remains unclear how the Colombian government is planning to cut ties with the ISDS system, but it could include re-negotiating or terminating existing investment agreements.
If the country seeks to terminate treaties – which van Asselt said is the more “nuclear” option – it could trigger so-called “sunset clauses”, which allow investors to still access ISDS for a period of 5 to 20 years after the agreements have been ceased. These clauses can be cancelled if both parties agree to it.
A 2025 paper by researchers at Boston University showed Colombia could be significantly exposed to lawsuits, as an estimated 129 oil and gas projects are covered with ISDS provisions – the most of any country in the Amazon basin.
At last year’s COP30, the country vowed to ban all oil and gas drilling in the world’s largest rainforest, which, if implemented to existing projects, could trigger multi-billion dollar lawsuits, according to the paper. In 2015, neighbouring Ecuador lost a $1.7 billion case with oil major Occidental for ending an oil concession, while Venezuela lost an $8.5bn judgement with ConocoPhillips in 2019 for nationalising oil assets.
The Colombian American Chamber of Commerce, an industry body that promotes American investments in the country, said in a statement that the move away from the ISDS system “deepens uncertainty” for investors. Its president María Claudia Lacouture added that disputes don’t arise from the system itself but from “changing rules, reduced predictability, a lack of institutional coordination, and weaknesses in preventing unlawful harm.”
Several other countries including Indonesia, South Africa, Bolivia and India have moved to cut ties with the ISDS system, while Brazil and Suriname avoided its provisions altogether in their investment deals. Tienhaara said this has not stopped investment in these countries.
However, she added that “it would be easier for Colombia (and other countries in the Global South that might be interested in following this path) if other countries, particularly from the Global North, would support them through an ISDS-free alliance”.
Ramping up support
While it is not the first country to move away from the ISDS system, experts said Colombia has an opportunity to rally other countries to follow their path, as it prepares to host the first Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels in the Caribbean city of Santa Marta.
Van Asselt said that the country sends a “crucial” signal ahead of the conference, suggesting that to move away from coal, oil and gas governments need to look at broader reforms of international finance and investment.
Tienhaara added that “it is excellent that Colombia is showing leadership, but they should not have to”, as the ISDS system was set up by developed countries and international agencies like the World Bank, who should be leading efforts to reform it.
“In many ways, the current situation mirrors that of climate action more broadly – countries in the Global South like Colombia and the Pacific Islands are leading the transition away from fossil fuels when it should be the big polluters in the Global North taking responsibility,” she said.
The post Colombia pledges to exit investment protection system after fossil fuel lawsuits appeared first on Climate Home News.
Colombia pledges to exit investment protection system after fossil fuel lawsuits
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COP31 electrification push a welcome first step by Presidency, but insufficient without ending fossil fuels: Greenpeace
Bonn, Germany, Tuesday 9 June 2026 — Greenpeace has welcomed the COP31 Presidency’s electrification initiative — a 35% by 2035 target as part of the Action Agenda launch — as a positive step forward, but said it must be coupled with a rapid phase out of fossil fuels as part of a just transition to renewable energy to keep the 1.5°C limit within reach.
While electrifying households, industry and other major sectors with renewable energy is a key component of ending fossil fuel use, a focus alone on growing renewables and expanding electrification will not be enough without a managed, proactive wind-down of fossil fuel production as well.
Speaking from Bonn, Dr Simon Bradshaw, COP31 Lead at Greenpeace Australia Pacific said: “Minister Bowen and his Turkish counterpart Minister Kurum must maintain the global momentum towards a phase out of fossil fuels and ensure that a just transition is at the heart of the COP31 agenda.
“As Minister Bowen said, we are in the middle of a global fossil fuel crisis. Ending the fossil fuel chokehold is the only path towards greater peace and security and the only way to keep 1.5°C within reach. This means no new fossil fuel approvals and a managed phase out of fossil fuel production.
“Renewable electrification is also the path to universal energy access, better health and reducing inequality, but only if the solutions are accessible to all. This new electrification push should have equity at its heart and maximise the opportunities to leave all communities stronger.
“Nowhere are the benefits of renewable electrification clearer than in the Pacific. For some countries, fuel import costs are equivalent to 25% of GDP. The region has been hit particularly hard by the current global fossil fuel crisis, with multiple Pacific countries declaring a state of emergency over concerns for fuel and power supply.
“The Pacific is already facing the brunt of a climate crisis and now faces the compounding injustice of an energy crisis brought on by fossil fuel dependence. It did not create either of these crises, but is among the most exposed to both. The Pacific is leading the global push beyond fossil fuels, with the aim of becoming the world’s first fossil fuel free region.”
“As COP31 President of Negotiations, it’s time for Australia to also lead by example. This means an immediate halt to new fossil fuel projects — including Woodside’s reckless Browse gas project — and developing a national roadmap away from fossil fuel production.”
The past decade has seen strong progress in the roll-out of renewable energy and in 2026 unprecedented momentum is being built towards the phase out of fossil fuels, after 57 committed countries came together in Santa Marta in April and the global energy shock brought on by the war on Iran exposed the inherent risk of fossil fuel reliance.
Coinciding with the Bonn Climate Change Conference, Greenpeace International has released a report outlining the rapid growth in renewables since the Paris Agreement [1] and calling for an accelerated fair, fast and funded just transition through deliberate political choices and strong policy frameworks.[2]
Berkan Ozyer, Director of Greenpeace Türkiye, said: “It is a deep contradiction that Türkiye, as COP31 host, is championing a vision of electrification in the global arena while continuing to keep 37 active coal power plants running and leaving the door open for new projects at home.
“While dependence on fossil fuels condemns us to expensive energy and a reliance on global supply chains, our massive wind and solar potential is the true key to Turkish independence. Real climate leadership means winning the electrification race, not just by talking about clean energy, but by setting a bold and just coal phase-out date as part of a transition away from all fossil fuels.”
ENDS
Notes
[1] Read the Greenpeace Energy [R]evolution+10 report
[2] A Just Transition Away from Fossil Fuels: Policy Briefing
Photos in the Greenpeace Media Library
Media contact
Kate O’Callaghan on +61 406 231 892 (Whatsapp/Signal) or kate.ocallaghan@greenpeace.org
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