Ecuador’s OCP heavy crude pipeline started pumping again on July 7, 2025, after a week-long shutdown caused by severe erosion along the Loco River in the Amazon.
The company built a temporary bypblock to restore the flow, ending a suspension that began July 1 as a safety measure against further damage from heavy rains.
This shutdown forced Ecuador to stop all oil exports, as both the OCP and the state-owned SOTE pipelines went offline. Together, these pipelines move up to 810,000 barrels of crude oil per day from the Amazon to the Pacific coast.
The state oil company, Petroecuador, declared force majeure, citing the urgent need to protect both infrastructure and the environment. Oil is the backbone of Ecuador’s economy.
In 2024, the country produced about 475,000 barrels of crude each day, exporting over 70 percent. The sudden halt in exports led to a daily loss of roughly 133,000 barrels, cutting deep into national revenue and foreign exchange reserves.

This disruption is part of a pattern. Since 2020, heavy rains and erosion have repeatedly damaged Ecuador’s pipelines and roads in the Amazon.
In March and June 2025, landslides caused major oil spills, polluting rivers and farmland, displacing thousands of people, and costing over $4 million in cleanup for the June incident alone.
Ecuador’s Aging Pipeline Infrastructure Faces Climate Risks
The country’s largest hydroelectric plant, Coca Codo Sinclair, also faces risks from advancing erosion. Officials have responded by building temporary bypblockes and planning new routes for the pipelines.
However, these fixes are short-term. The pipelines remain vulnerable to climate and environmental hazards, and shutdowns are becoming more frequent. Each incident puts pressure on Ecuador’s budget, its credit rating, and its ability to deliver oil to buyers.
The consequences go beyond lost revenue. Oil spills have polluted water and farmland, harming local communities and fragile ecosystems. Oversight and compensation for affected people remain ongoing challenges.
Ecuador’s pipeline crisis shows the risks of depending on aging infrastructure in a region prone to extreme weather. The country now faces tough choices about how to secure vital exports, protect the environment, and adapt to a future where climate shocks threaten its main economic lifeline.