March 03, Colombo (LNW): Sri Lanka stands at a delicate juncture in its environmental reform journey, and the spotlight now falls squarely on the Central Environmental Authority. In moments such as this, institutions are not merely administrative bodies; they become symbols of national intent.
Whether Sri Lanka’s environmental agenda will command credibility — both at home and abroad — depends not only on policy declarations, but on the stability and continuity of those entrusted to implement them.
A concerned citizen has described this as a defining moment, and the phrase is not misplaced. Across the globe, environmental governance has become intertwined with economic resilience, foreign investment confidence, and international partnerships. For Sri Lanka, still navigating post-crisis recovery and seeking to rebuild trust in its regulatory institutions, environmental reform is more than a technical exercise. It is a test of seriousness and state capacity.
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This is, unmistakably, a defining moment for the Central Environmental Authority.
If Sri Lanka’s environmental reform agenda is to command credibility — domestically and internationally — institutional stability must be safeguarded.
Retaining seasoned legal stewardship during a period of legislative transition is not a luxury; it is a strategic necessity. Nations do not falter because they lack ambition.
They falter when they fail to preserve the wisdom that makes ambition workable.
If experience is permitted to walk away unchecked, reform may yet become an edifice built upon sand.
