Sustainability, ESG & Corporate Responsibility
View all(45)📈 Ceylon Chamber Hosts Vital Dialogue on Sri Lanka’s Energy Transition
The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce convened public and private sector leaders, academics, and industry experts for a strategic discussion titled “Energy Transition in Sri Lanka: Strategic Insights from Global Markets,” framing renewable energy as a critical pillar for national energy security and economic competitiveness. • Strategic Focus: The dialogue centered on shifting toward cleaner, technology-driven energy systems to drive industrial growth, enhance national resilience, and meet the high-power demands of digital transformation (including AI, data centers, and electric mobility). • Key Priorities Discussed: Regulatory frameworks, electricity sector reforms, grid modernization, and financing models. • Standards & Safety: Experts emphasized that establishing clear technical and safety standards is essential to protect consumers and businesses as national solar and energy storage adoption scales up. • Next Steps: Moving forward, the Ceylon Chamber will collaborate with government and industry stakeholders to develop evidence-based policy recommendations to boost investor confidence and support long-term economic progress.
Agronomic Realities vs. Myths: Evaluating Oil Palm Cultivation in Sri Lanka 📈
• Land Use & Context: _Oil palm_ occupies ~10,400 hectares in the wet zone low country. Cultivation is confined to degraded or marginal lands previously used for tea or rubber, causing zero natural forest deforestation. • Soil & Erosion Facts: The region's acidic, low-fertility Red Yellow Podzolic soils are inherent to the wet zone, not caused by oil palm. Erosion rates depend on land management rather than the crop. Standard practices like cover cropping, mulching, and contour planting effectively control soil loss. • Nutrient & Fertilizer Efficiency: On a per-unit-area basis, oil palm's macronutrient needs are comparable to coconut and lower than tea. Crucially, oil palm achieves the highest yield per unit of nutrient applied among major plantation crops. Returning biomass (pruned fronds and empty fruit bunches) to the soil enhances organic carbon and minimizes soil acidification. • Biodiversity & Water Consumption: Studies at local estates show understory vegetation diversity and earthworm densities in oil palm fields are comparable to or higher than rubber stands. Per hectare, oil palm consumes ~34,480 liters of water daily, closely matching rubber (~32,760 liters). In recommended areas with >2,500 mm annual rainfall, the crop utilizes under 35% of total annual precipitation. • Sustainability & Waste: Local processing facilities, such as the AEN factory, utilize advanced technologies to achieve zero-waste generation. Experts advocate shifting public discourse toward measurable global sustainability frameworks like the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) certification, which several Sri Lankan plantation companies already maintain.
Sajith Calls for National Climate Strategy Ahead of El Niño 🌍
Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa has urged the National Council for Disaster Management to adopt a science-based, whole-of-government approach to climate resilience, warning of a limited window to prepare for the 2026-2027 El Niño cycle. • Anticipated Climate Impact: Global scientific assessments suggest the upcoming El Niño could rank among the strongest in decades, risking "climate whiplash" characterized by prolonged droughts followed by severe flooding. • Economic & National Security: The proposal emphasizes that climate resilience is directly linked to economic stability, heavily affecting vital sectors such as agriculture, water security, energy, public health, infrastructure, and fiscal stability. • Strategic Proposals: Key recommendations include transitioning to anticipatory governance driven by forecasting, expanding disaster risk financing, and establishing a National Climate Risk and Disaster Intelligence Centre. • Long-Term Policy: Premadasa proposed a Presidential White Paper on National Climate Resilience to ensure a policy framework that outlasts successive administrations, drawing on international best practices from India and Australia.
New Initiative: Linking Rehabilitated Youth to Private Sector Jobs 📈
The Ministry of Industries and Entrepreneurship Development has officially launched a programme aimed at integrating youth who have completed drug rehabilitation into the national workforce. • Objective: To facilitate permanent _private-sector employment_ for rehabilitated individuals. • Strategic Focus: By transitioning these individuals into formal industry roles, the initiative aims to support social reintegration while filling labor needs within the private sector. • Implementation: The Ministry is acting as the primary coordinator to bridge the gap between rehabilitated youth and potential employers, emphasizing sustainable career pathways. This programme highlights a proactive approach to human capital development and industrial workforce expansion.
Poson Lessons: Navigating a BANI World 📈
• Economic & Political Context: Sri Lanka exemplifies the global BANI framework (Brittle, Anxious, Non-Linear, Incomprehensible). The nation continues a challenging transition from pandemic disruptions to deeper economic and institutional instability, requiring long-term systemic thinking. • National Challenges: • Healthcare & Welfare: High mass anxiety persists due to unstable supplies and exorbitant prices of vital drugs. • Infrastructure: Post-recovery delays following Cyclone Ditwah highlight unpredictable, non-linear operational bottlenecks causing public frustration. • Governance & Expertise: Systemic structural flaws are exacerbated by political misaligned priorities and failed economic interventions by non-performing experts. • BANI 2.0 Strategic Blueprint: To foster long-term national resilience, the local ecosystem must pivot from passive illusions to targeted ignitions: • Bold: Commit completely to calculated, risk-assessed turnaround strategies. • Assertive: Establish authentic, clear communication lines across leadership roles. • Neutral: Drive objective, unbiased policy actions to safeguard macroeconomic stability. • Innovative: Catalyze development across critical industrial and service frameworks. • Sustainability & Leadership: Drawing from the historical context of Poson, national and institutional leaders must shift governance from an "owner" mindset to a "trustee" model, prioritizing ecological preservation and sustainable resource utilization over short-term consumption.
🖥️ Commercial Bank Launches 'ComBank Akshara' & Reaches 400th IT Lab Milestone
• Digital Infrastructure: The Commercial Bank of Ceylon donated its 400th IT Lab to Mahamathya Vidyalaya, Athurugiriya. This flagship program equips underserved schools with computers, accessories, and furniture to bridge Sri Lanka's digital divide. • National Impact: The initiative has benefited more than 500,000 students nationwide. It aims to enhance digital literacy, promote inclusive education, and support long-term economic development. • CSR Evolution: The bank unveiled ComBank Akshara, a unified identity to consolidate all its education-focused Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) projects. • Strategic Focus: Beyond IT Labs, the bank's strategy supports the ICT/BPM and technology sectors by investing in STEM classrooms, mathematics labs, digital curriculum development, and coding education to prepare students for a modern economy.
📈 Sri Lanka’s Energy Decisions Crucial for Economic Future
• Context: Marked on National Energy Day, Sri Lanka's energy strategy is shifting from basic power generation to a broader focus on economic resilience, global competitiveness, and reducing vulnerability to volatile global fuel prices. • Sector Focus: Solar energy represents the nation's largest untapped natural asset. Transitioning to renewable energy is being positioned as an economic necessity to strengthen national independence, create skilled jobs, and lower carbon footprints. • Corporate & ESG Trends: Clean energy is increasingly vital for corporate sustainability and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) compliance. Moving to renewables helps local industries remain competitive, meet future regulatory requirements, and improve operational efficiency. • Strategic Needs: Accelerating this transition requires deep public-private collaboration. Key requirements include consistent government policy frameworks, private sector innovation, accessible green financing from financial institutions, and sustainable consumer choices.
📈 From Burden to Game-Changer: Clean Energy Rewrites Global Growth Rules
A quiet transformation at the 2026 Summer Davos in Dalian highlights how the global energy transition is shifting from a climate cost into a vital economic driver, essential for national competitiveness and economic stability. • Overall Dynamic: As the digital economy accelerates, clean energy is becoming fundamental to protecting national growth against geopolitical shocks and inflation, rather than being a regulatory burden. • Inclusive Growth & Manufacturing: Distributed renewables (e.g., solar/wind bases) are redistributing economic gains to underdeveloped regions. For a developing economy like Sri Lanka, this model demonstrates how green infrastructure can generate rural income, build strategic autonomy, and attract light manufacturing. • AI & Digital Infrastructure: Global data-center electricity demand is projected to more than double to 945 TWh by 2030. Co-locating AI infrastructure with renewable power sources allows data processing where green energy is abundant, creating a major demand anchor for ICT/BPM and digital economy investments. • Strategic Autonomy: Relying on fossil fuel imports exposes nations to supply chain shocks and inflation. Investing in localized renewable capacity ensures stable energy prices, which acts as a competitive edge to anchor long-term industrial investment. _Note: Analysis based on global commentary and structural shifts presented at the 2026 Summer Davos._
⚡ David Pieris Renewable Energy Drives Sri Lanka’s Green Transition
David Pieris Renewable Energy (DPRE), a member of the David Pieris Group, is expanding its footprint in Sri Lanka's sustainable energy sector to support national carbon reduction and energy security goals. • Key Projects & Scale: The company has successfully executed multiple large-scale solar installations, including a 400kWp project in Peliyagoda and a 500kWp project in Kapugoda. DPRE actively participates in mega-scale commercial, industrial (C&I), and government solar tenders. • Service Portfolio: Offers comprehensive on-grid, hybrid, and off-grid solar power systems alongside solar hot water solutions. To address grid reliability, DPRE is heavily prioritizing advanced energy storage technologies (hybrid systems with battery backups) for uninterrupted power supply. • Value Add: Beyond end-to-end engineering, installation, and after-sales support, DPRE facilitates international Net Zero certification for its clients' projects, aiding corporate sustainability compliance.
☀️ ADB Approves US$ 57.4 Mn for Sri Lanka’s Rooftop Solar & Grid Modernization
• Funding Breakdown: Total project cost is estimated at US$ 80.5 Mn. This includes a US$ 57.4 Mn ADB financing package—comprising a US$ 35 Mn concessional loan, a US$ 16.9 Mn European Union grant, and a US$ 5.5 Mn Japan Fund grant—supplemented by counterpart funding from implementing agencies. • Capacity & Partners: Supports approximately 25 megawatt-peak (MWp) of rooftop solar installations. The project will be executed by Electricity Distribution Lanka (Private) Limited and Lanka Electricity Company (Private) Limited. • Core Mechanism: Introduces a utility-led rooftop solar aggregation and virtual net metering model. It pools electricity from large rooftop systems and virtually distributes credits, enabling consumers to access solar power benefits without installing individual panels. • Economic & National Impact: Specifically benefits micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and community organizations facing space or financial constraints, lowering their electricity costs via a social compensation mechanism. • Infrastructure & Employment: Focuses on distribution network digitalization and grid modernization to support decentralized renewable energy. Additionally, it will establish a green skills training facility to drive employment and participation for women and youth in the clean energy and power sector.
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Green Entrepreneurship: Turning Environmental Challenges into Opportunities 🌍
Sustainable entrepreneurship is emerging as a critical driver for addressing pressing global and local environmental issues, such as climate change—recently highlighted by local impacts like Cyclone Ditwah—pollution, and biodiversity loss. • Strategic Focus: Entrepreneurs are increasingly treating ecological crises as business opportunities, proving that environmental responsibility can align with long-term profitability. • Key Sectors: Significant innovation is taking place in: Renewable Energy: Scaling solar, wind, and hydro solutions to reduce fossil fuel dependence. Waste Management & Circular Economy: Utilizing recycling and reuse strategies to combat plastic pollution. Green Manufacturing: Developing biodegradable packaging, organic alternatives, and energy-efficient devices. Electric Vehicles: Adopting cleaner transportation technologies to lower carbon footprints. • Economic & Social Impact: These ventures support national goals by fostering job creation, driving green exports, and influencing consumer behavior toward more sustainable lifestyles. As environmental awareness grows, businesses are demonstrating that integrating sustainability into core operations is not only necessary for the planet but also a viable pathway for economic and social development.