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Colombia raises Ecuador tariffs to 100% as trade tensions escalate

By Thomson Reuters Apr 10, 2026 | 3:25 PM

BOGOTA, April 10 (Reuters) – Colombia will raise tariffs on neighboring Ecuador to 100% from 30%, Colombia’s trade ministry said on Friday, matching Ecuador’s measure from a ​day earlier amid an escalating trade and diplomatic ‌spat between the two South American nations.

Ecuador has in recent months hiked a tariffs against its larger neighbor citing a trade deficit and accusing Colombia of not doing enough to fight drug trafficking at the ‌shared ​border – allegations Colombia has denied, citing ⁠joint military operations.

Ecuador’s government has ⁠also clashed diplomatically with Colombian President Gustavo Petro over his comments that Ecuador’s former vice president, jailed for corruption, is being held as political prisoner and should be ​freed.

Colombian trade minister Diana Morales said in a statement that Ecuador’s latest tariff hike, from 50% to 100%, forced ⁠Colombia to align its policy.

The ⁠process to implement the new measure would begin ​immediately, she said.

“We have exhausted all diplomatic efforts and kept channels ​of dialogue open with the government of Ecuador, ‌seeking a solution that benefits both countries, businesses, and above all, the communities on both sides of the border,” she said.

“However, we have not received a positive response.”

Tensions further escalated ⁠last month when 14 people were killed in explosions in Colombia as Ecuador conducted a security operation nearby. Ecuador denied violating the ⁠border and said ‌it was looking into how its explosives ⁠came into Colombian territory.

Colombia has already halted ​energy sales ‌to Ecuador, which are critical during droughts ​when hydroelectric ⁠dams dry up. Ecuador also imports significant quantities of medicines and pesticides from the neighboring country.

In 2025, Colombia reported a $1.02 billion trade surplus with Ecuador.

Bogota has also raised the issue with the CAN Andean trade bloc.

(Reporting by Nelson Bocanegra, Editing by ​Daina Beth Solomon)