Industry & Sector News
View all(58)Health Ministry to Invest Rs. 1.95 Bn in 11 Advanced CT Scanners 🏥
• Overall Investment: The Ministry of Health and Mass Media is investing Rs. 1.95 billion to procure and install 11 advanced Computed Tomography (CT) scanners in hospitals across Sri Lanka. • Strategic Impact: This major healthcare infrastructure upgrade aims to significantly strengthen national diagnostic services, particularly for critical care and emergency services. • Targeted Medical Areas: The advanced scanners will directly support clinical diagnoses and treatment planning for major health burdens, including strokes, cancer, heart disease, trauma, and emergency care.
📈 Govt. Adopts "Ceylon Tea Village" Model to Target US$ 2.5 Bn Revenue
• Strategic Goal: The Sri Lankan government is restructuring the smallholder tea sector to boost productivity, value addition, and export earnings, targeting US$ 2.5 Bn in annual revenue by 2030. • Production Target: The initiative aims to lift finished tea production to 400 million kilograms while improving farmer incomes and premium global positioning. • Implementation: Executed by the TSHDA, TRI, SLTB, and NPMI, the program will launch on 15 July 2026. It starts with 144 cluster villages across 14 districts, eventually expanding to 500 countrywide. • Key Focus: The model integrates modern cultivation, infrastructure, and cooperatives to fix structural weaknesses like low yields. It will also promote tea-linked tourism and branded, value-added products to shift away from bulk commodity exports.
🌿 Sri Lanka Tops Global Wellness Travel Trends for 2026
Sri Lanka has been ranked the world’s fastest-growing wellness travel destination for 2026, driven by a major shift toward health, mindfulness, and rejuvenation over conventional leisure holidays. Key Insights from the "State of Retreats 2026" Report: • Surging Demand: Sri Lanka recorded a phenomenal 100% increase in global demand, leading all other international destinations in the wellness sector. • Consumer Spending Shift: A survey of 1,040 US travellers revealed that 49% plan to prioritize spending on wellness retreats in 2026 over spa treatments, dietary supplements, and gym memberships. • Economic Potential: The findings position Sri Lanka’s tourism sector—a critical pillar for national employment and foreign exchange—to capitalised heavily on the lucrative, rising global demand for holistic travel experiences.
⚡ Smart Grids Driving Sri Lanka's 70% Renewable Energy Goal by 2030
Sri Lanka is rapidly transforming its energy infrastructure by integrating smart grid technology to optimize solar and wind power, targeting 70% of electricity generation from renewable sources by 2030. • Renewable Capacity: Heavy investments include the 100 MW Kandalama Solar Park and the 100 MW Phase I of the Mannar Wind Farm to leverage the island's natural resources. • Grid Optimization: The integration of ICT/BPM and digital tech enables real-time monitoring via Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI), enhancing grid stability, cutting energy losses, and preventing blackouts caused by intermittent renewable supply. • Key Initiatives: The Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) is executing a Smart Grid Pilot Project alongside the National Renewable Energy Grid Integration Plan, backed by technical and financial funding from the ADB and World Bank. • Economic & Environmental Impact: The shift reduces fossil fuel reliance and greenhouse emissions while lowering operational costs for energy providers. The expansion is also driving economic growth by drawing investments and creating new jobs in the local power and energy sector.
⚡ Asia Power Crisis Amplifies Urgency for Renewable Shift
• Regional Impact: The Middle East conflict highlights Asia-Pacific's reliance on oil imports, which account for about 60% of its total oil supply. Tight supplies have triggered energy price hikes, inflation, and economic slowdowns across developing economies. • Renewables & Economic Security: Shifting to clean energy is now vital for economic resilience rather than just environmental benefit. The region is already the world’s largest and fastest-growing market for renewables, with seven countries now sourcing over half of their energy from clean options, followed by Pakistan at 38% and India at 34.1%. • Grid Restructuring & Projects: Rising urban energy demand requires transitioning to regional "smart grids" to handle intermittent solar and wind nodes. A primary example is the LTMS-PIP project, which successfully traded 100 MW of renewable hydro power from Lao PDR to Singapore via Thailand and Malaysia, with plans to double this capacity in phase two. • Financing & Policy Reforms: Accelerating the transition requires innovative multilateral development bank programs, corporate power purchase agreements, and unbundling state-owned power monopolies into independent system operators to foster fair competition against fossil fuels.
📈 Global Crewing Crisis: Ship Managers Diversify Sourcing Amid Low Retention
A landmark World Maritime University (WMU) survey reveals severe workforce strain, warning that nearly half of today's seafarers plan to quit within five years due to grueling working conditions. • The Retention Crisis: The study (based on 4,372 seafarers globally) shows crews working an average of 71 hours per week, with one-third experiencing "severe and dangerous" stress levels. Restricted shore leave and high administrative burdens are driving a massive talent drain. • Shift to New Frontier Markets: With traditional crewing nations aging, ship managers are looking to Africa, which currently supplies only 3% of the global maritime workforce. Countries like Ghana, Kenya, and Tanzania are emerging as high-potential hubs due to strong investments in technical maritime education. • Strategic Diversification: Industry leaders emphasize that sourcing is about long-term resilience and quality rather than cheap labor. While expanding digitally into non-traditional regions like Vietnam and Turkey, managers are also doubling down on traditional talent pools in India, the Philippines, and Eastern Europe. _Context for Sri Lanka_: As a maritime nation focused on expanding its employment footprint in seafaring and diversification of skilled labor exports, global shifts toward higher-quality technical education and better seafaring conditions remain critical benchmarks. Ultimately, experts warn that geographic diversification will fail unless core issues like rest standards and mental well-being are legally addressed to plug the leaking talent pipeline.
⚓ Day of the Seafarer 2026: Honoring the Backbone of Global Supply Chains
The global maritime community marked the Day of the Seafarer on June 25, 2026, highlighting the irreplaceable human element driving international commerce and its vital economic importance to island nations and coastal economies. • Global Trade Impact: Over 80% of global trade by volume is transported by sea. Seafarers ensure the secure transit of essential commodities, including food, medicine, fuel, and raw materials. • Economic & Career Value: For countries with strong maritime heritages, seafaring serves as a critical driver for national employment, offering high-paying career pathways, specialized skill development, and international exposure. • Industry Transformation: While modern vessels feature advanced automation, digital navigation, and green propulsion systems, skilled professionals remain critical to managing complex machinery and implementing environmental sustainability goals. • Key Challenges: The workforce faces intense operational pressures, including extended isolation and demanding hours. Current industry focus has shifted heavily toward enhancing maritime training, physical safety standards, and mental health support. As global trade networks expand, the demand for highly skilled maritime professionals remains robust to ensure economic stability and resilient supply chains.
SLRA 9th AGM: New Leadership & Strategic Roadmap Unveiled 📈
The Sri Lanka Retailers’ Association (SLRA) successfully concluded its 9th Annual General Meeting (AGM) on 23 June 2026, outlining future priorities for the nation's organized retail sector. • New Leadership Team (2026–2027): Mr. Infiyaz M. Ali (Director, Healthguard Pharmacy Ltd) was appointed as President. He is supported by Mr. Mahesh Wijewardena (Singer Sri Lanka PLC) as Senior Vice President and Mr. Kumar De Silva (SPAR SL Private Ltd) as Vice President. • Economic & Industry Impact: The Chief Guest, Hon. Wasantha Samarasinghe (Minister of Trade, Commerce, Food Security and Cooperative Development), highlighted the retail sector as a crucial driver for national economic development, employment generation, and consumer welfare, advocating for stronger public-private collaboration. • Diverse Sector Representation: Formed in 2015, the SLRA provides a unified voice for varied industries driving diversification and employment, including FMCG, fashion, healthcare, consumer electronics, and digital commerce. • Flagship Event Announced: The association presented plans for the upcoming Sri Lanka Retail Forum 2026. Themed "Retail Without Boundaries – Building the Next Growth Engine," the event is projected to bring together over 500 industry leaders, policymakers, and technology providers to map out future growth.
🚢 Listen to Seafarers to Accelerate Safe Tech Adoption, Warns Lloyd’s Register Foundation
A human-centred approach to training, fatigue management, and seafarer-informed skills development is critical to modernizing global maritime logistics—a sector vital to Sri Lanka's positioning as a regional hub. Key insights from Posidonia 2026 include: • Tech Adoption Pace: The speed at which new fuels and technologies are adopted depends heavily on seafarer perceptions and how fast training systems evolve to support safe operations. • Crew Shortages & Safety: Lack of qualified crew and inadequate training for emerging technologies create high safety risks, alongside cognitive overload from excessive system requirements. • Modernizing Training: Maritime education must move away from outdated paper-based systems. Leveraging AI and data analytics can create personalized, efficient learning paths without aggravating existing crew fatigue. • Urgency for Change: A major industry misconception is that there is ample time to adapt. Technologies are advancing much faster than global regulatory frameworks and training education systems can change. _Note: Based on an exclusive interview with Lloyd’s Register Foundation during Posidonia 2026._
📈 Sri Lanka Aims to Reposition Handloom as High-Value Export Industry
Deputy Minister of Industry and Entrepreneurship Development Chathuranga Abeysinghe has called for traditional handloom to be treated as an "industry of the future," focusing on global demand for sustainable, high-value fashion products. • Key Focus Areas: The state initiative aims to tap into premium international markets by transitioning from traditional sarees to casual fashion, resort wear, and wellness-oriented apparel. • Competitive Advantage: Unlike mass-market apparel & textiles, the handloom sector offers unique local craftsmanship, distinct patterns, and sustainable features that are difficult to replicate globally. • Private Sector & Youth Integration: Calls were made for greater private sector investment to scale up production and commercialize designs, alongside combining the creative talent of young designers with business expertise. • Institutional Restructuring: The Government is currently restructuring key entities, including the EDB, the Department of Textiles, Laksala, and Salusala, to streamline support and enhance global market access.
📈 Sri Lanka's Knowledge & Innovation Industry Emerges as Key Export Driver
The Knowledge and Innovation Industry continues to solidify its position as one of Sri Lanka’s largest export sectors, driving economic growth, foreign exchange earnings, and high-value employment. • Overall Export Performance 2025 Revenue: Estimated at US$ 2.00 Bn in export value. Freelancer Contribution: Includes ~US$ 500 Mn from digital entrepreneurs and remote workers. 2026 Momentum: Earned over US$ 581 Mn in the first four months of 2026. • Sector Evolution & Diversification Shifted from traditional IT/BPM delivery to a broad-based intellectual property hub. Core segments now include software engineering, global capability centers (GCCs), data & AI services, cybersecurity, and product development. • Market Expansion & Strategy Global Outreach: Recent outward trade delegations to Australia, Germany, and Japan are building strategic partnerships. Growth Drivers: Spearheaded by SLASSCOM across five pillars—market expansion, entrepreneurship, talent development, policy advocacy, and ecosystem building. Key Initiatives: Launching the 'DISHA' mentoring platform to scale startups and SMEs, alongside curriculum enhancements to boost global AI readiness.
🛡️ SLASSCOM Forum: Transforming Cybersecurity into Business Resilience
• Event & Partnership: Sysco LABS, Sri Lanka's leading ICT exporter, participated as the Strategic Partner in the latest SLASSCOM CEO Breakfast Forum to drive industry dialogue on technology and organizational resilience. • Core Theme: The panel discussion, titled "Transforming Cyber Security into Business Resilience," focused on the evolving role of cybersecurity in safeguarding business operations and fostering innovation. • Key Participants: The distinguished panel featured global and local industry leaders, including: • Thushera Kawdawatta (Managing Director, Sysco LABS) • Aditi Sawhney (Senior VP, Mastercard Asia Pacific) • Jayantha Fernando (Partner, Heritage Partners) • Madu Ratnayake (President, SCYBERS) • Asela Waidyalankara (Moderator & Cybersecurity Strategist) • National Impact: As a major pillar for national diversification and high-value employment, Sri Lanka's ICT/BPM sector continues to leverage these platforms to foster collaboration, knowledge sharing, and long-term growth.