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Casanare Department

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National subdivision in Colombia Department in Orinoquía Region, Colombia
Department of Casanare Departamento de Casanare
Department
Flag of Department of CasanareFlagCoat of arms of Department of CasanareCoat of arms
Motto(s): Trabajo y Libertad
(Spanish: Work and Freedom)
Anthem: Himno de Casanare
Casanare shown in redCasanare shown in red
Topography of the departmentTopography of the department
Coordinates: 5°21′0″N 72°24′36″W / 5.35000°N 72.41000°W / 5.35000; -72.41000
Country Colombia
RegionOrinoquía Region
Department1991
Province1660
CapitalYopal
Government
 • GovernorSalomon Andres Sanabria (2020-2023)
Area
 • Total44,640 km (17,240 sq mi)
 • Rank10th
Elevation350 m (1,150 ft)
Population
 • Total420,504
 • Rank25th
 • Density9.4/km (24/sq mi)
GDP
 • TotalCOP 23,661 billion
(US$ 5.6 billion)
Time zoneUTC-05
ISO 3166 codeCO-CAS
Municipalities19
HDI0.741
high · 16th of 33
Websitewww.casanare.gov.co

Casanare (Spanish pronunciation: [kasaˈnaɾe], Spanish: Departamento de Casanare) is a department located in the central eastern of Colombia. It is famous for its oil and natural gas production as well as its livestock and extensive plains. It is also the tenth largest department with an area of 44,490 km, similar to that of Denmark, but also the seventh least densely populated.

Its capital is Yopal, which is also the episcopal seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Yopal.

It contains oil fields and an 800 km pipeline leading to the coastal port of Coveñas owned by BP.

Rivers and dams

The Upía River (Río Upía) is in Casanare. Casanare, Ariporo, Guachiría, Guanapalo, Pauto, Tocaría, Cravo Sur, Cusiana, Túa y Upía.

History

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1973 -—    
1985 147,472—    
1993 211,329+43.3%
2005 295,353+39.8%
2018 420,504+42.4%
Source:

A former subregion of Boyacá, Casanare became separate department in 1973.

Municipalities

  1. Aguazul
  2. Chámeza
  3. Hato Corozal
  4. La Salina
  5. Maní
  6. Monterrey
  7. Nunchía
  8. Orocué
  9. Paz de Ariporo
  10. Pore
  11. Recetor
  12. Sabanalarga
  13. Sácama
  14. San Luis de Palenque
  15. Támara
  16. Tauramena
  17. Trinidad
  18. Villanueva
  19. Yopal, capital

See also

References

  1. "DANE". Archived from the original on November 13, 2009. Retrieved February 13, 2013.
  2. "Producto Interno Bruto por departamento", www.dane.gov.co
  3. "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 2018-09-13.
  4. S.A.S, Editorial La República. "Campos petroleros de Casanare, los que más aportaron al aumento de la producción". Diario La República (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-09-12.
  5. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2008-09-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. "Reloj de Población". DANE. Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadísitica. Archived from the original on 16 January 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2017.

Sources and external links

Departments of Colombia
South America

 Amazonas
 Antioquia
 Arauca
 Atlántico
 Bolívar
 Boyacá

 Caldas
 Caquetá
 Casanare
 Cauca
 Cesar
 Chocó

 Córdoba
 Cundinamarca
 Guainía
 Guaviare
 Huila
 La Guajira

 Magdalena
 Meta
 Nariño
 N. Santander
 Putumayo
 Quindío

 Risaralda
 San Andrés
 Santander
 Sucre
 Tolima
 Valle del Cauca

 Vaupés
 Vichada

Capital district:
 Bogotá



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