November 11, Colombo (LNW): Showers or thundershowers will occur at most parts of the island after 1.00 p.m., and fairly heavy falls above 75 mm are likely at some places in Uva, Southern, Sabaragamuwa and Central provinces and in Ampara and Batticaloa districts, the Department of Meteorology said in its daily weather forecast today (11).
Showers may occur in Northern province and in Trincomalee district during the morning too.
Misty conditions can be expected at some places in Western, Southern, Sabaragamuwa, Central and Uva provinces and in Ampara district during the early hours of the morning.
The general public is kindly requested to take adequate precautions to minimise damages caused by temporary localised strong winds and lightning during thundershowers.
Marine Weather:
Condition of Rain:
Showers or thundershowers will occur at several places in the sea areas around the island.
Winds:
Winds will be North-westerly or variable in direction and speed will be (20-30) kmph.
Wind speed can increase up to 40 kmph at times in the sea areas off the coast extending from Galle to Hambantota via Matara.
State of Sea:
The sea areas off the coast extending from Galle to Hambantota via Matara will be moderate. The other sea areas around the island will be slight.
Temporarily strong gusty winds and very rough seas can be expected during thundershowers.
Afternoon showers, thundershowers to further continue: Fairly heavy falls above 75 mm expected (Nov 11)
Sri Lanka’s Digital Energy Drive Faces Hurdles despite Early Gains
By: Staff Writer
November 10, Colombo (LNW): Sri Lanka’s push toward a digital energy ecosystem is gathering momentum, but progress remains uneven, hampered by funding shortfalls, weak coordination, and the absence of a unified national roadmap, according to the Institute of Policy Studies’ (IPS) State of the Economy 2025 report.
The report highlights that while the National Energy Policy (NEP) 2019 laid the groundwork for digitalisation, its implementation has been fragmented, particularly amid the country’s macroeconomic crisis. Rising import costs and foreign currency shortages have further strained the power sector, limiting the rollout of digital initiatives.
Despite these challenges, interviews with key stakeholders including the Ministry of Power and Energy, the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB), the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL), Lanka Electricity Company (LECO), and the Sri Lanka Sustainable Energy Authority (SLSEA) reveal pilot-level progress and early adoption of smart technologies.
Support from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has been a critical driver, with a $200 million loan aimed at strengthening the national grid and introducing battery storage facilities.
These investments are enabling smart-grid technology adoption, and pilot projects like the one at the University of Moratuwa are advancing both research and student skill development. Feasibility studies are also underway to establish renewable-energy control centres capable of monitoring generation digitally, including wind power plants, under ADB guidance.
Operationally, LECO has launched several digitalisation pilots, including an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system and around 5,600 smart-metering initiatives. Roughly 25% of its 38,000 consumer accounts now have smart meters, allowing remote reading and billing. Weather stations installed at key transformers support predictive maintenance, helping staff locate faults within a 10–15 kilometre range.
CEB, serving 7.2 million customers, has also developed its own digital platforms. The CEB Care app and SMS services provide billing, account management, and outage reporting through GPS and GIS-linked tools. LECO’s MyLECO app complements these services with usage tracking, alerts, and multi-language support. Both apps, developed locally, are seen as foundational steps toward transforming utility–consumer engagement.
However, IPS notes that digitalisation targets set under the 2020–2024 energy policy have only been partially met. Constraints include limited resources, lack of coordination, and no comprehensive national digital roadmap.
While LECO is advancing renewable-energy forecasting tools and GIS-based network automation, and CEB pilots digitalisation across its value chain, structural gaps remain. Proposed data-governance policies and mandatory building-management systems through UDA regulations have yet to be fully implemented.
SME Engine under Strain: Restructure IDB Now or Stall Growth
By: Staff Writer
November 10, Colombo (LNW): Sri Lanka stands at a critical juncture for its small and medium-enterprise (SME) sector. With the newly announced 2026 budget proposing a consolidation of the Industrial Development Board (IDB), the National Enterprise Development Authority (NEDA) and the Small & Medium Enterprise Development Division (SMED) under a single umbrella, the question is whether this institutional overhaul can deliver the leap in performance that SMEs so desperately need.
According to President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, the move is a bid to achieve “more efficient coordination” in the development of SMEs. Under the plan: IDB will absorb the functions of NEDA and SMED, with a proposed allocation of Rs. 4 billion to the IDB and an additional Rs. 1 billion earmarked for the establishment and development of industrial zones.
The overall budget for SMEs is set at Rs. 55.7 billion (Rs. 53.4 billion for capital expenditure and Rs. 2.3 billion for recurrent). A new loan scheme also aims to provide up to Rs 50 million at concessional interest rates, under a Rs. 7.7 billion allocation, and a further Rs. 5.9 billion and Rs. 6.2 billion are allocated respectively for the “Enhancing SMEs Finance Project” and the “Agriculture Value Chain Financing / Commercialisation Project”. These are significant moves indeed.
Yet behind the headline numbers lies a complex reality. SMEs are said to contribute over 52 % of GDP and employ nearly half the workforce, according to Mr. Dissanayake.
However, the structural and institutional framework to support them has long shown fragmentation and sub-optimal performance. The IDB itself only last year embarked on a structural overhaul of its staff roles and KPIs, signalling that institutional transformation is still in early phases.
For the first nine months of 2025, broader economic data offers both opportunity and caution. Export earnings rose to approximately US$12.99 billion, a 7 % increase year-on-year. Foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows reached about US$787 million over the same period.
Meanwhile the government’s budget deficit was reduced significantly to Rs. 441.4 billion from Rs. 970 billion in the January-September window, thanks to a 31 % rise in revenue to Rs. 3.83 trillion.
And yet private-sector borrowing rose in the first seven months to over Rs. 9.5 trillion. What does this mean for SMEs and the proposed restructuring? First, the rise in exports and FDI signals that external opportunities are growing but SMEs must be ready and able to tap them.
That requires well-coordinated institutional support, streamlined access to finance, stronger value-chain integration, and relevant industrial zones outside the main hubs. The proposed consolidation of IDB, NEDA and SMED, if executed with clarity and accountability, could help deliver this.
However, the risks are real. Consolidation can lead to disruption, duplication, cultural friction and delays unless clear transitional governance, performance metrics and stakeholder engagement are built in. The loan allocations are welcome, but access, monitoring and repayment performance will matter: the increase in private-sector borrowings shows risk is elevated. Without strong credit-risk management and targeted capacity building, SMEs may still struggle to scale and contribute meaningfully to growth.
Moreover, while macro-data is positive, the growth rate is still modest: 2025 is expected to grow only about 4–4.5 % according to the IMF and local analysts, weighed down by project delays and weak capital spending.
In that context, SMEs must become engines of productivity, not just of employment, meaning the new industrial zones and value-chain financing must enable export-ready manufacturing or services, not mere substitute imports.
In short: the restructuring of the IDB, NEDA and SMED presents a significant opportunity for Sri Lankan SMEs to break out of the longstanding institutional gridlock. But the deliverables matter clarity on roles, accountability, financing terms, zone activation, value-chain linkages and monitoring.
The risk is that this turns into another institutional reshuffle without meaningful results, at a time when the SME sector and national economy need a genuine growth boost. The proof will be in execution — the next 12 months will test whether the change is cosmetic or transformational.
IMF Pushes Sri Lanka to Free EPF from Central Bank
By: Staff Writer
November 10, Colombo (LNW): Sri Lanka’s flagship retirement savings vehicle, the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF), is sitting at the heart of a governance tug-of-war between the government and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Under current legislation the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) holds custodianship of the EPF’s assets yet the IMF’s recent Governance Diagnostic Assessment clearly flagged this as a conflict-risk and recommended the creation of an independent fund manager to oversee the scheme.
During a recent appearance before the Parliamentary Committee on Public Finance, CBSL Governor Nandalal Weerasinghe disclosed that the government had formally instructed CBSL to retain its custodianship role for now, despite the IMF recommending legislative reform to spin out EPF management into a separate institution akin to a Public Debt Management Office.
The IMF argues that with the EPF owning very large shareholdings across Sri Lanka’s banking and financial sector many state-owned and subject to potential political influence guardianship by CBSL creates a material risk of conflict of interest.
They note that “state-owned financial institutions are often exposed to increased risk of political influence over their operations” and that when a fund is investing in banks supervised by the same central bank, the appearance of compromised governance arises.
The EPF is the largest defined-contribution scheme for private and semi-government employees in Sri Lanka. As at the end of 2024 the Fund’s net worth stood at approximately Rs 4.38 trillion up roughly 12.6 % from Rs 3.89 trillion at end-2023.
According to the EPF’s website, assets reached Rs 4.3757 trillion at end-2024, with liabilities to members of Rs 4.2895 trillion. Member contributions jumped to Rs 234.4 billion, refunds fell to Rs 188.1 billion, and the number of contributing accounts rose by 10.8 % to 2.92 million.
During 2022 the EPF declared a rate of return of 9.00% to members, with assets at Rs 3.4599 trillion, up 9.3 % from the previous year.
With such a large asset base amounting to several % of GDP the EPF is more than a pension pool: it is a strategic national financial lever. The IMF’s governance diagnostic warns that when a large pension fund is overseen by the same institution that supervises banks and invests in them, it may indirectly shape government or banking behaviour, reduce transparency, and increase risk of politically-driven investments.
Creating a separate, independent fund manager could enhance clarity of accountability, reduce the potential for conflicted decision-making, and raise transparency (especially important given the IMF’s broader governance agenda, which calls for stronger independence of oversight institutions).
From an economic-policy standpoint, retention of the EPF under CBSL custody means the same entity that steers monetary policy (and supervises banks) also invests the largest retirement fund in the country heightening systemic concentration risk. In a situation of banking stress or large-scale government borrowing (as Sri Lanka continues to face), the EPF could be exposed to losses that bleed into general economic stability or foreshadow hidden contingent liabilities
Sri Lanka Defunct Shipping Corp Drains Millions amid Mismanagement
By: Staff Writer
November 10, Colombo (LNW): Once envisioned as a vital link between the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and the global maritime industry, a semi-state company jointly owned by the SLPA (40%) and the Ceylon Shipping Corporation (15%) has now become a financial burden on the national economy.
Established to elevate the quality of port services to international standards, the company’s steady decline in profitability, operational inefficiency, and poor financial discipline have turned it into a defunct enterprise struggling for relevance.
The company was initially tasked with a wide range of functions from controlling port transportation and managing cargo handling to administering employment agencies, managing Galle Face Green, and recruiting Sri Lankan seafarers for international employment. Despite these strategic responsibilities, its financial performance in 2023 paints a grim picture of mismanagement and stagnation.
According to audited data, the company’s total income for 2023 amounted to Rs. 145.66 million, against an expenditure of Rs. 143.24 million, leaving a meagre profit of Rs. 2.4 million a sharp drop from Rs. 7.1 million in the previous year. The 3% decline in income reflects operational inefficiencies and a lack of strategic direction, raising serious questions about its economic viability.
The financial setbacks have not been limited to reduced profits. In a glaring example of mismanagement, the company entered into an agreement in 2014 with Tangyo Haulage (Pvt) Ltd to obtain carrier vehicles. Its subsequent failure to meet payment obligations led to a court-ordered compensation of Rs. 28.9 million in 2017, draining valuable public funds. This legal debacle remains a testament to weak financial control and oversight.
Further compounding its troubles, the company leased out a cafeteria at the Macculum Gate premises of the Ports Authority to a third party from 2008 to 2023. Despite the operation spanning 15 years, a sum of Rs. 4.5 million remains unpaid to the company, with no recovery action initiated even by the end of 2023. This negligence not only highlights lax financial governance but also exposes the absence of accountability mechanisms within the management.
Economists warn that the prolonged inefficiency of such semi-state enterprises imposes a silent but significant burden on the national economy. If a company with state ownership continues to generate negligible returns while holding valuable assets, it effectively ties up public capital that could be reallocated to productive sectors like logistics modernization, trade facilitation, or digital port management.
Given Sri Lanka’s ongoing efforts to reform and commercialize state-owned enterprises, the question of whether this company should continue to operate in its current form has become increasingly relevant. Analysts argue that unless the entity undergoes deep restructuring, transparent management reforms, and performance-based accountability, it will remain an economic liability rather than a contributor to national growth.
In the face of recurring losses, unpaid dues, and outdated operational practices, the company’s viability is now in serious doubt. Without decisive government intervention either through restructuring or strategic partnerships with private operators the once-promising venture risks becoming yet another failed state-owned enterprise draining scarce public resources
People’s Bank Director Forced Out
November 10, Colombo (LNW): Several directors of People’s Bank have reportedly been replaced following their efforts to raise concerns over possible irregularities in the construction of the bank’s new head office building.
The project, which was originally budgeted at Rs. 4.4 billion, is now expected to close at Rs. 9.4 billion. Opposition lawmaker Dr. Harsha de Silva recently brought the matter to the attention of Parliament, highlighting the significant cost escalation.
In response, depositors and stakeholders are calling for a comprehensive inquiry into the use of funds and the circumstances surrounding the project.
Ambassador Prof. Pivithuru Janak Kumarasinghe Presents Credentials to the Emperor of Japan
Newly appointed Ambassador of Sri Lanka to Japan Prof. Pivithuru Janak Kumarasinghe presented the Letters of Credence to His Majesty Naruhito at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo 31 October 2025. The Credentials Presentation Ceremony is one of the most solemn and formal ceremonies held by His Majesty the Emperor of Japan.
Escorted by the Master of Ceremonies of the Imperial Household Agency, Ambassador Prof. Kumarasinghe was horse-drawn carriage courtesy of His Majesty from the historic Tokyo Station to the Imperial Palace.
At the outset of the formal occasion, His Majesty the Emperor conveyed warm greetings and best wishes to President Anura Kumara Disanayaka and the Sri Lakan people which was warmly acknowledged by Ambassador Prof. Kumarasinghe. After the formal presentation of his credentials in the presence of the Honourable MATSUMOTO Yohei, Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, representing the Prime Minister and the Government of Japan, Ambassador Prof. Kumarasinghe was afforded the opportunity to engage in an informal conversation with His Majesty Naruhito.
Ambassador Prof. Kumarasinghe becomes the nineteenth Ambassador of Sri Lanka to Japan. A distinguished academic, economist, and public policy advisor, he brings over 25 years of experience in teaching, research, and national capacity-building.
Ambassador Prof. Kumarasinghe holds a Ph.D. in Development Economics from Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University (Japan), a Master’s Degree in Public Policy from the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS), Japan, and a First Class Honours Degree in Public Administration from the University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Sri Lanka.
Prior to this appointment, Ambassador Prof. Kumarasinghe served as a senior academic at the University of Sri Jayewardenepura, where played a pivotal role in academic reform, research development, and public policy formulation. His research portfolio spans diverse topics including economic development, savings behavior, the role of SMEs, foreign remittances, and macroeconomic policy.
Ambassador Prof. Kumarasinghe has also served as a resource person to national ministries and institutions, including the Ministries of Education, Finance, and Defense, and held key administrative roles in the university sector, including Deputy Proctor, Director of Career Guidance, and Member of the University Governing Council.


UNHCR Seeks to Restart Voluntary Repatriation of Sri Lankan Refugees as Citizenship Debate Deepens in India
November 10, Colombo (LNW): The United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) is holding discussions with its Colombo mission to resume the voluntary repatriation of Sri Lankan refugees living in India, following the suspension of the programme after the recent arrest of four returnees in Sri Lanka.
Speaking to NDTV, Areti Sienni, UNHCR’s Chief of Mission in India, described the arrests as “concerning” and said the agency was hopeful that the process could soon restart. She revealed that around 200 Sri Lankans returned home last year under the voluntary repatriation scheme, with about 50 more expressing interest in returning this year.
Sienni emphasised that the UNHCR continues to work alongside Indian authorities to secure long-term solutions for refugees — whether through repatriation, naturalisation, or third-country resettlement. India currently hosts over 80,000 Sri Lankan refugees, most of whom fled the island during its civil conflict and have since lived in Tamil Nadu, with some families spanning three generations.
Since the launch of the voluntary repatriation programme in 2002, more than 18,600 refugees have returned to Sri Lanka with UNHCR support. However, for many others born and raised in India, the lack of formal refugee legislation remains a major obstacle. Without citizenship, they continue to reside in designated refugee camps monitored by local authorities, facing restrictions on employment, education, and mobility.
While the younger generation has gained access to higher education, they often encounter barriers in entering professional fields such as medicine and public service, as employers are hesitant to recruit non-citizens. Many young refugees now consider India their permanent home and express little interest in returning to Sri Lanka.
Under Indian law, Sri Lankan refugees are not penalised for overstaying, but they are still legally classified as “illegal migrants” under the Citizenship Act. Moreover, the Citizenship Amendment Act — which fast-tracks naturalisation for non-Muslim migrants from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh — does not extend the same benefits to Sri Lankan nationals.
Amid this legal ambiguity, the Tamil Nadu government has introduced several measures to uplift refugee communities, including vocational training, financial assistance for women-led enterprises, and partnerships with industries to employ skilled youth, particularly in the IT sector.
Sienni acknowledged that the decision to grant citizenship ultimately rests with the Indian government, but praised Tamil Nadu’s initiatives and its collaboration with legal experts and civil society to help eligible refugees secure legal status. The UNHCR, she said, continues to offer technical and policy support to both central and state authorities to promote refugee inclusion.
“Citizenship is a powerful expression of belonging,” Sienni remarked. “When it becomes accessible, it marks the end of refugeehood and opens the door to full participation in a nation’s social and economic life.”
She commended the Indian and Tamil Nadu governments’ ongoing efforts, calling them “a valuable example for the international community” in promoting dignity, stability, and opportunity for long-term refugee populations.
Government Approves US$18 Million Overhaul for Sri Lanka Air Force MI-17 Helicopters
November 10, Colombo (LNW): The Cabinet has given the green light for an urgent refurbishment programme covering four MI-17 transport helicopters belonging to the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF), in a deal estimated to cost around US$18 million in total — approximately US$4.5 million per aircraft, a report by the Sunday Times disclosed.
The overhaul and service life extension, according to the report, will be carried out by Winsley Defence Group d.o.o. of Bosnia and Herzegovina, represented locally by Securatec Lanka (Pvt) Ltd. The company was selected as the lowest substantially responsive bidder following a lengthy evaluation process that began in 2023.
The budget allocation includes expenses for two-way transportation of the aircraft to the maintenance facility and comprehensive insurance coverage during the process. A full report detailing the tender and implementation timeline is expected to be tabled before the Cabinet next week.
Senior Air Force officials underscored the urgency of the project, noting that the MI-17s are critical to both domestic and international operations. Delays in the overhaul, they warned, could jeopardise vital missions such as flood relief, emergency response, and United Nations peacekeeping deployments involving SLAF contingents.
New “Road Fitness Certificate” to Become Mandatory for All Vehicles by 2028
November 10, Colombo (LNW): The Department of Motor Traffic has unveiled plans to introduce a compulsory Road Fitness Certificate for every vehicle operating on Sri Lankan roads, extending the requirement beyond commercial fleets to include private cars and motorcycles.
Commissioner General of Motor Transport Kamal Amarasinghe said the new certification system would replace the current arrangement, under which only commercial vehicles are required to undergo roadworthiness checks.
The upcoming Road Fitness Certificate will merge the existing Emission and Fitness Certificates into a single document, simplifying the process for motorists while ensuring vehicles meet both environmental and mechanical safety standards.
Amarasinghe explained that the measure aligns Sri Lanka with international best practices, noting that similar systems are already mandatory in most developed countries to maintain safer, cleaner roads. “No vehicle should be allowed on the road unless it meets basic environmental and safety requirements,” he said.
The proposed programme, described as a large-scale and technically complex initiative, will require extensive groundwork before it can be rolled out. Preparatory activities are expected to begin in 2026, with the full implementation scheduled for 2028.
The Commissioner General also confirmed that the current vehicle emission certification system will continue to operate legally until December 31, 2027, ensuring a smooth transition to the new, integrated framework. The reform, he added, aims to improve road safety, reduce pollution, and strengthen regulatory efficiency across the country’s transport network.