Industry & Sector News
View all(63)Upgraded Neurology Institute Inaugurated at National Hospital 📈
Health and Media Minister Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa has inaugurated the newly upgraded Neurology Institute at the National Hospital of Sri Lanka, marking a significant advancement in the country's healthcare infrastructure. • Investment Details: The comprehensive reconstruction project was completed at a total cost of Rs. 99 million. • Project Objective: The initiative is specifically aimed at enhancing and expanding specialized neurological care services to better serve the national population. • Context: This upgrade represents a targeted state investment in public healthcare infrastructure, directly impacting specialized medical service delivery and patient care capacity within the state sector.
📈 LP Gas Prices Remain Unchanged for June
Litro Gas Lanka and Laugfs Gas PLC have announced that domestic LP gas prices will remain stable throughout June, maintaining May rates despite international energy market volatility and currency fluctuations. Litro Gas (Colombo District): • 12.5 kg: Rs. 4,765 • 5 kg: Rs. 1,910 • 2.3 kg: Rs. 890 Laugfs Gas (Colombo District): • 12.5 kg: Rs. 6,245 • 5 kg: Rs. 2,500 Key Takeaways: • Companies cited consumer relief and economic stability as primary drivers for the decision. • Both firms are absorbing increased procurement, freight, and logistics costs internally to avoid price hikes. • Laugfs attributed the mitigation of cost pressures to improved operational efficiencies and supply chain management. • Prices for both suppliers remain subject to regional variations based on transportation and distribution costs.
⚠️ Seafood Industry Urges Govt to Stop Illegal Indian Trawler Incursions
The Seafood Exporters’ Association of Sri Lanka (SEASL) has called for immediate government action to block the expected resumption of illegal cross-border fishing by Tamil Nadu trawlers around June 15, warning of severe economic and environmental fallout. • Key Threat: Continued illegal bottom trawling in Northern and North-Western waters causes irreversible damage to marine ecosystems, depletes critical seafood stocks, and directly threatens the livelihoods of thousands of local fishing communities. • Export Impact: The industry warns that these destructive practices compromise Sri Lanka’s ability to supply quality seafood to global markets, threatening international buyer confidence and access to key destinations. • Compounding Pressures: Exporters are already facing intense strain from rising operational costs, existing US tariffs, and the looming threat of an additional 12.5% tariff under Section 301 measures. • National Context: SEASL emphasizes that protecting national fisheries resources is a matter of economic urgency to safeguard an industry that generates vital foreign exchange earnings and supports hundreds of thousands of livelihoods. SEASL President Dilan Fernando urged the President, the Fisheries Ministry, and the Sri Lanka Navy to treat maritime boundary defense as a matter of the highest national priority.
📈 Sri Lanka Lacks Marine Science Data to Protect Blue Economy
An uncomfortable reality faces Sri Lanka’s maritime ambitions: the nation lacks the coordinated scientific infrastructure to systematically measure, monitor, and defend over 80% of its territorial domain. • The Core Challenge: While meteorological records span over a century, marine environmental tracking remains fragmented, short-term, and project-based. The country currently lacks a centralized database and internationally accredited marine science laboratories. • Economic & Strategic Risks: Without credible baseline data, Sri Lanka cannot independently verify environmental damage or substantiate compensation claims during maritime disasters. This critical gap leaves national interests dependent on external expertise just as shipping traffic and complex international regulations increase. • Sector Impact: This scientific deficit directly threatens the sustainable management and development of key sectors including fisheries, logistics, ports, offshore resources, and tourism. • The Way Forward: Experts suggest Sri Lanka adopt public-private partnership models—similar to regional observation networks in India and the Maldives—to fund dedicated research vessels, AI-driven data modeling, and continuously calibrated oceanographic instruments. _Note: Analysis based on assessments from the Ocean University of Sri Lanka._
📈 Sri Lanka Face Rising Cyber Risks: Training Declared a Strategic Investment over IT Cost
A significant rise in cyber incidents targeting Sri Lankan businesses, government bodies, and financial institutions has made cyber threats a daily operational reality, according to CICRA Holdings. Despite heavy technology spending, human behavior remains the primary vulnerability. • The Human Firewall: Cyber security is no longer just an IT problem. Modern attacks like Business Email Compromise (BEC) and AI-generated phishing specifically target non-technical staff in finance, HR, and senior management. • The Zero Trust Shift: Organizations are adopting Zero Trust Architecture (never trust, always verify). However, technology alone fails if employees are not regularly trained on rapidly evolving threats like deepfake voice scams, credential theft, and ransomware. • Continuous Validation over Checkbox Compliance: One-time annual training for compliance is an empty cost. Real cyber resilience requires continuous behavioral monitoring, simulated attacks, and management reporting to measure risk across departments. • Structured Accountability Framework: Experts recommend a clear accountability policy for repeated failures during simulation tests: First incident: Educational guidance. Second incident: Compulsory retraining (with potential cost-sharing based on internal policy). Repeated incidents: Formal warnings, as cyber negligence poses severe financial, operational, and reputational risks. • Strategic Outlook: Cyber risk must be treated as a core business risk at the board level. When paired with continuous monitoring and behavioral assessments, cyber training transforms from a compliance expense into a vital investment in organizational resilience.
📈 Container Transport Charges Up 5% Post-Fuel Revision
The Container Transport Owners Association has increased container transport charges nationwide by 5% effective 1 June, following the latest state fuel price hike. • Overall Impact: The price hike responds directly to mounting operating costs for transport and logistics providers. This marks the fifth fuel price revision by the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) since the Middle East conflict escalated in late February. • Supply Chain Implications: Industry stakeholders warn the revision significantly drives up domestic transport and logistics expenses. It adds financial pressure on container haulage operators, importers, and exporters already dealing with elevated global freight rates and rising energy costs. • National Context: As a critical pillar supporting Sri Lanka's trade-driven sectors like apparel & textiles and tea, the 5% increase in haulage rates directly impacts the cost competitiveness of the country's export and import supply chains.
📈 Sri Lanka Tourism: Driving Growth Through the Concert Economy
Global shifts toward the experience economy present Sri Lanka with a strategic opportunity to transform its tourism landscape. Developing a structured live entertainment and concert sector can attract high-value visitors and establish Colombo as a modern regional entertainment hub by 2030. • Global Market Growth: The global live entertainment market is projected to expand at a CAGR of 5.4% (2025–2034), growing from US$ 535.4 Bn in 2025 to US$ 859 Bn by 2034, heavily driven by event-linked music tourism. • Regional Benchmarks: In 2024, India’s organized live events segment crossed ~US$ 1.2 Bn (15% growth). High-profile case studies like Coldplay's 2025 Ahmedabad concerts generated an estimated US$ 76.9 Mn in total economic impact, demonstrating massive destination travel. • Structural Constraints in Sri Lanka: Growth is currently hindered by supply-side gaps rather than demand. Key bottlenecks include a shortage of purpose-built mid-to-large venues, complex institutional approval processes, and a lack of formal training ecosystems for technical event production. • Strategic Roadmap: Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) to develop modular venues with 5,000–20,000 capacities. A digital, single-window centralized approval system to streamline licensing. Dedicated performer and group visa mechanisms to simplify entry for international talent. Standardized certifications in sound engineering, lighting, and event safety aligned with national skilling frameworks to formalize creative industry employment. _Note: Based on sector analysis and regional economic impact data._
📈 Sri Lanka Tourism Hits 1 Million Arrivals Mark
Sri Lanka's tourism sector crossed a major milestone on 28 May, fueled by strong growth in May, though cumulative year-to-date figures dipped slightly. • Overall Figures (Provisional Data): • Total year-to-date (YTD) arrivals reached 1.01 million tourists between 1 January and 28 May. • This reflects a marginal 1% year-on-year (YoY) decline compared to the same period in 2025. • Over the next seven months, the industry requires an additional 2 million visitors (66.3% of the target) to meet the ambitious annual goal of 3 million arrivals. • May Performance Surge: • Arrivals for the first 28 days of May reached 134,530, marking a strong 12% YoY increase from 120,120. • Daily average arrivals for May climbed to 4,805, up from 4,290 in the previous year. • Top Source Markets: • India remains the dominant driver for tourism, leading May arrivals with 56,063 visitors (42% share) and leading YTD arrivals at 245,981. • The UK secured the second spot for both May arrivals (8,582 or 6%) and YTD travelers (97,427). • China followed as the third largest market for May with 8,439 visitors (6%), while Russia held the third spot for YTD arrivals with 75,963 tourists.
📈 Sri Lanka SUV Registrations Ease in April
SUV and crossover registrations declined to 4,853 units in April 2026, down from 5,841 units in March, according to data analyzed by JB Securities. • Overall Figures: Brand-new registrations dropped to 1,957 units (from 2,740 in March), while pre-owned registrations eased to 2,895 units (from 3,101 in March). The financing share for the segment stood at 48.6%. • Brand Performance: - Toyota led the market with 1,725 units, driven by the Raize (1,204 units) and Urban Cruiser (277 units). - Honda secured second place with 906 units, dominated by the Vezel (875 units). - Suzuki ranked third with 688 units, heavily backed by the Fronx (684 units). - Nissan (268 units, mainly Magnite) and Kia (256 units, led by Sorento) followed. - BYD recorded 200 units, primarily Sealion variants (173 units). - Land Rover posted 49 units, including 30 Defenders and 18 Range Rovers. • Market Trends: Small-engine models with capacities below 1,500cc heavily dominated the segment, accounting for 95% of total registrations. Chinese brands like GAC, SAIC, Jetour, and Changan also contributed, mainly with plug-in hybrid models.
Global Air Passenger Demand Drops 3.4% in April Amid Middle East Conflict 📈
• Overall Figures: Total global passenger demand (RPK) fell -3.4% YoY in April 2026, severely impacted by a 46.6% drop in Middle East carrier demand due to regional war. Global capacity (ASK) decreased -2.9% YoY, with a load factor of 83.1% (-0.4 ppt). Excluding the Middle East, global demand actually increased by 1.2%. • International vs. Domestic: International demand dropped -5.3% YoY (but grew 1.9% excluding the Middle East), while international capacity fell -5.1%. Domestic demand remained flat YoY, with capacity up 0.8% and a load factor of 81.9%. • Regional Breakdown: • Asia-Pacific: Achieved a 3.0% YoY demand increase. Capacity rose 0.7% and the load factor hit a record April high of 87.5% (+1.9 ppt). Traffic slowed on the Japan-China corridor due to political tensions. • Europe: Demand grew 0.9% YoY. Notably, direct Europe-Asia traffic surged 15.3% as airlines bypassed Middle East transit hubs, highlighting a structural shift in routing relevant to global connectivity. • Middle East: Demand collapsed by -48.1% YoY, and capacity fell -38.4% due to the Iran war, though an uneasy ceasefire slowed the decline slightly compared to March. • Other Regions: Latin America led growth with an 8.9% demand increase, Africa grew 2.2%, and North America remained flat (0.0%). • Market Outlook: Jet fuel costs more than doubled in April, driving up airfares. Forward schedules show reduced capacity as airlines balance extreme fuel costs and weaker demand.
📈 Sri Lanka Energy Crisis: A Systemic Failure, Not Resource Scarcity
A commentary by a University of Moratuwa professor reveals that Sri Lanka’s expanding electricity supply-demand gap stems from obsolete institutional systems and policy inconsistencies, rather than a shortage of natural resources or technology. • Overall System Pressures Sri Lanka's 2025 GDP growth exceeded 5% (vs. the planned 4%), driving up industrial, commercial, and household base loads. Structural shifts—such as urbanisation, widespread air conditioner usage, and electric vehicles—are outgrowing current forecasting models. Failing to replace thermal plants carries heavy costs via diesel imports and high tariffs; replacing a single 350 MW thermal plant requires 1,400 MW of Solar + BESS (Battery Energy Storage Systems) capacity. • Institutional and Process Bottlenecks Conventional tendering takes years due to overlapping institutional layers involving the Ministry, CEB, PUCSL, SEA, and the Treasury. Policy inconsistency and a lack of a clear, stable framework for LNG and thermal generation weaken investor confidence. Project execution lags behind global timelines (18–24 months) due to prolonged procurement, transmission constraints, and delayed Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs). • Proposed Solutions & Fast-Tracking Deploy unused demand-management tools: smart meters, time-of-use tariffs, and consumer incentives for peak reduction. Implement Feed-in Tariffs (FiT) for Solar + BESS (under 10 MW) to shift daytime generation to night peak hours, and use competitive tenders for larger 16-hour continuous solar-storage projects. Introduce a single-window approval mechanism, maximum approval timelines, a project monitoring dashboard, and accelerated transmission investments to swiftly mobilise private capital.
📉 US Tourism Suffers Worst Drop Since 2020 Amid Shifting Global Trends
The US experienced its sharpest annual decline in international tourism since the COVID-19 pandemic, contrasting with a broader global travel boom in 2025. Based on provisional data, the downturn reflects rising costs and changing global perceptions rather than a worldwide crisis. Key Figures & Economic Impact • Visitor Volume: Approximately 4 million fewer international tourists traveled to the US in 2025, marking a 5.5% year-over-year (YoY) decrease. This exceeds the losses recorded during the 2008 financial crisis. • Total Spending: Foreign visitor spending fell sharply by US$ 8.4 billion compared to 2024. Economists note the total broader economic impact could reach up to US$ 25 billion against initial growth forecasts. • Global Contrast: While US arrivals dropped, worldwide international travel increased substantially, with roughly 80 million more people traveling globally in 2025. Top Affected Source Markets • Canada: Canadian travelers accounted for the single largest share of the decline, representing the most dramatic reduction in cross-border travel. • Other Major Regions: Outbound visitor numbers to the US also dropped significantly from key markets including India, Germany, France, Australia, and China. Primary Drivers of the Decline • Rising Costs: Increased travel expenses, higher airfares linked to geopolitical conflicts, and confusion over proposed visa fees deterred visitors. • Socio-Political Factors: Deteriorating international perceptions, domestic political rhetoric, tariff disputes, and global concerns over safety and immigration enforcement weakened America's "soft power" advantage.