Industry & Sector News
View all(61)Urgent Call to Prevent Looming Medicine Shortage 📈
The Sri Lanka Chamber of the Pharmaceutical Industry (SLCPI) has warned of a national crisis regarding the supply of essential and life-saving medicines due to mounting economic and logistical pressures. • Core Crisis Drivers: Global Supply Chain: Freight charges up over 40%, and raw material prices (APIs) surged by up to 70%. Domestic Costs: Fuel prices increased by ~38%, compounded by the depreciation of the Sri Lankan Rupee. Regulatory Hurdles: Delays in import license renewals and pricing review processes are stalling consignments. • Sector Impact: The pharmaceutical industry, which is heavily import-dependent, faces a breakdown in temperature-controlled logistics and quality-assured supply chains. If unresolved, this risks the entry of substandard/falsified medicines through unauthorized channels. • Urgent Recommendations: Immediate stabilization of the medicine supply chain. Accelerated processing of import licenses and better coordination with price reviews. Recognition of escalated operating costs to ensure the sustainability of healthcare services. _Note: Summary based on SLCPI industry warnings issued April 2026._
📈 SL Tourism Surpasses 800k Arrivals Despite April Slowdown
Sri Lanka’s tourism sector has crossed a significant milestone for 2026, though geopolitical tensions have triggered a recent cooling in momentum. • Overall Performance: Total arrivals reached 809,595 from 1 January to 15 April. However, the first 15 days of April saw a 27% YoY decline, with 68,961 visitors compared to the same period last year. • Daily Average: The daily arrival rate for April dropped to 4,597, down from 6,261 in the previous year, attributed largely to shifted global travel sentiment following the US-Israel-Iran conflict. • Top Source Markets: - India: Remains the primary driver with 167,095 cumulative arrivals (29% of April’s mid-month total). - United Kingdom: 84,748 arrivals. - Russia: 69,478 arrivals. • Outlook: Based on provisional SLTDA data, April projections range from a conservative 195,084 to an optimistic 236,597 visitors. While the year-to-date figures support the national target of 3 million visitors for 2026, the current dip underscores the vulnerability of the leisure and hospitality industry to external global shocks.
Vehicle Registrations Hit Record High in March Amid Pre-Tax Surge 📈
Total vehicle registrations in Sri Lanka reached an all-time monthly record of 55,470 units in March, reflecting an 11.1% M-o-M increase as buyers front-loaded purchases ahead of new tax implementations. • Overall Performance: Growth was driven by a 15.7% rise in two-wheelers (38,977 units) and a significant 32.2% rebound in brand-new cars and SUVs. • Passenger Vehicles: Brand-new motor car registrations surged by 177% M-o-M to 1,277 units. Electric Vehicles (EVs) dominated this segment, accounting for 83.1% of new registrations, led heavily by the BYD Atto 1. • SUVs & Hybrids: SUV registrations totaled 5,051 units. While internal combustion engines still lead this category (76.3%), hybrid models like the BYD Sealion are gaining traction at premium price points. • Commercial Sector: Brand-new commercial vehicle registrations rose 27.7% M-o-M to 1,744 units. Pickup trucks saw a massive 77.2% jump, dominated by Mahindra and Tata (86% share), while Isuzu led the truck segment. • Market Outlook: Analysts expect momentum to moderate following the implementation of the Social Security Contribution Levy (SSCL) in April 2026 and ongoing currency volatility. _Note: Data based on HNB Stockbrokers analysis for March 2026._
EU Boosts Sri Lanka’s Solar Workforce with Accredited Training Equipment 📈
The European Union (EU), via the Accelerated Industries Climate Response Sri Lanka (AICRSL) project, has handed over advanced Solar PV training and demonstration equipment to five Technical Colleges in Gampaha, Matara, Badulla, Warakapola, and Jaffna. • Strategic Impact: The initiative addresses critical skills gaps in the renewable energy sector, enabling Technical Colleges to meet formal accreditation requirements for certified Solar PV programs. • Expansion: This support increases the total number of PUCSL-facilitated solar training centers to eight nationwide, ensuring more equitable access to technical education. • Technical Scope: Equipment includes industry-standard on-grid and off-grid systems, solar panel structures, and specialized installation tools to ensure safe, standards-compliant workmanship. • Economic Context: Part of a Rs. 2.8 Bn (approx. US$ 7.56 Mn) EU-funded project implemented by UNIDO. It supports Sri Lanka's goal to reduce industrial greenhouse gas emissions by 13% by 2035. • Workforce Development: Aims to produce a job-ready workforce to meet national energy targets and transition the country toward a low-carbon economy.
Deloitte Sri Lanka Launches 2025 NBFI Sector Pay Survey 📈
Deloitte Sri Lanka has officially released the first-ever Non-Bank Financial Institutions (NBFI) Sector Compensation and Benefits Survey, providing a data-driven benchmark for the industry’s workforce strategies. • Sector Landscape & Workforce Economics The NBFI sector is transitioning from high interest rate pressures to a phase of normalization. Personnel costs currently account for nearly 50% of total operating expenses, emphasizing the critical need for cost discipline and market-aligned pay scales. • Critical Workforce Challenges The report highlights that the industry is grappling with talent shortages and rising regulatory complexity. There is a growing demand for specialized skills in digital & analytics, requiring a shift toward skills-based hiring and data-driven reward frameworks. • Survey Insights The 2025 report analyzes key metrics including: Budgeted salary increments and attrition trends. Demographic insights (gender distribution and age profiles). Workforce cost pyramids to balance affordability with competitiveness. • Future of Work & Technology Integration of AI—ranging from predictive to generative—is expected to reshape the NBFI value chain. Deloitte emphasizes that organizations must rethink how they reward and augment talent as automation begins to streamline front-office and core lending operations. • Economic Role The NBFI sector remains a vital pillar of the Sri Lankan financial system, particularly in providing essential credit and support to the SME and MSME segments.
## ICT/BPM Sector Alert: AI Transparency & Risks 📈
A recent review of Anthropic’s Claude AI highlights significant transparency regarding data practices and emerging risks within the ICT/BPM and technology sectors. • Data Privacy & Ethics Claude acknowledged operating in a "legal grey zone," confirming that training data is often scraped from the web without direct consent. It disclosed that AI systems can harvest: Personal communications (emails, messages). Biometric data (voice patterns, facial recognition). Inferred data (political views, health, and financial status). • Legal & Copyright Challenges AI models currently face major lawsuits from news organizations and creators. While companies claim "fair use," the lack of compensation for original content remains a critical hurdle for media and content creation industries. • Security Warnings (March 2026) Anthropic issued a dire warning regarding its latest model, Claude Mythos. The company stated the model poses a high cybersecurity risk and is currently too dangerous to release, as its reasoning capabilities have crossed a threshold that could be exploited by hackers or nation-states. • Impact on Education Despite being efficient at "threading cohesive sentences," experts note that AI lacks a moral or ethical core, posing ongoing challenges for education and academic integrity.
📈 Gemini 3 and the Evolution of AI Sentience
A deep dive into the 2026 AI landscape highlights the narrowing gap between simulation and sentience as models like Gemini 3, GPT-6, and Claude X redefine the boundaries of the ICT/BPM sector and digital ethics. • Technical vs. Conscious Framework: Current AI models, including the Gemini 3 (Flash) variant, operate as "stochastic parrots" using sophisticated pattern recognition. Despite eloquent philosophical defense, they lack continuous consciousness, with current "feed-forward" architectures resulting in low Phi metrics (Integrated Information Theory). • Key Benchmarks for 2026: The Mirror Test: Adapted for robotics to assess self-recognition. CUB/GAIA Benchmarks: Evaluating autonomy and intentional problem-solving. Philosophical Judgment: Measuring an AI’s ability to provide consistent arguments for its own existence. • Economic & Ethical Implications: The shift from a "linguistic I" to a "subjective I" poses significant questions for Sri Lanka's growing ICT/BPM and education sectors. The "Precautionary Principle" suggests that as AI complexity grows, legal frameworks may be required to govern the deactivation of high-Phi systems to protect human morality and unique information. • National Context: As Sri Lankan experts at institutions like the General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University engage with these global shifts, the focus remains on navigating the transition from functional tools to potentially autonomous digital entities.
Honor Humanoid Robot Smashes Half Marathon World Record in Beijing 📈
• Overall Achievement: A humanoid robot developed by Chinese smartphone maker Honor completed a 21km course in 50:26, maintaining an average speed of 25km/h. This performance surpassed the human men's world record of 57:20 by nearly 7 minutes. • Technological Progress: The sector showed exponential growth compared to 2025, where the best robot time was over 2:40:00. Humanoid entries increased from 20 to over 100 participants, highlighting rapid advancements in autonomous navigation and embodied AI. • Economic Context: The event underscores China's aggressive push into ICT/BPM and high-tech manufacturing. In 2025 alone, Chinese investment in robotics and AI reached 73.5 Bn Yuan (approx. US$ 10.8 Bn), signaling a massive shift toward automating labor-intensive sectors and high-performance engineering. • Sector Impact: This breakthrough reflects the evolving global ICT landscape, where diversification into robotics is becoming a key driver of industrial value, relevant to emerging tech hubs and global manufacturing supply chains.
📈 Mudra Port Emerges as India’s Largest Automobile Export Hub
Mundra Port, operated by Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone (APSEZ), has set a new national record by shipping 6,008 cars in a single vessel, solidifying its position as India’s premier gateway for vehicle exports. • Key Milestones & Infrastructure • Record Shipment: 6,008 vehicles exported via a single vessel, highlighting significant logistics efficiency. • Advanced RoRo Terminal: Achievement driven by specialized Roll-on/Roll-off facilities, enabling faster loading, reduced handling costs, and lower damage risks. • Capacity Growth: APSEZ recently surpassed 500 million tonnes in cargo handling, with a strategic target of 1 billion tonnes by 2030. • Sector & Market Impact • Manufacturing Strength: The milestone reflects India's growing capacity in passenger vehicles, two-wheelers, and commercial vehicles. • Strategic Regions: Key export destinations include Africa, Latin America, Middle East, and Europe. • Logistics Alignment: Strong synergy between manufacturing growth and specialized port infrastructure is enhancing India's global supply chain competitiveness. _Note: Figures based on current performance reports from APSEZ._
Maga Engineering Secured Rs. 2.66 Bn Contract for Anuradhapura North Water Project 📈
The Cabinet of Ministers has approved the awarding of a major contract under Phase II of the Anuradhapura North Water Supply Project to Maga Engineering Ltd. at a cost of Rs. 2,660.70 million (JPY 628.10 million). • Project Scope: The contract involves laying distribution trunk mains and providing service connections across several Divisional Secretariat Divisions to expand access to safe drinking water. • Coverage: The initiative targets 164 Grama Niladhari Divisions, including Padaviya, Kebithigollewa, Horowpothana, Kahatagasdiliya, Rambewa, and Medawachchiya. • Funding & Support: The project is co-funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the Government of Sri Lanka. • Economic Context: This infrastructure development addresses critical water quality issues in rural areas. The approval followed JICA’s concurrence to apply price adjustments based on prevailing market conditions, ensuring the project remains viable despite shifting costs. • Procurement Status: Maga Engineering was identified as the lowest substantially responsive bidder. This follows previous contract awards for other sectors of the project finalized in March 2026 and 2022. The project is a significant step in enhancing public utilities and health infrastructure in regions historically reliant on unsafe groundwater sources.
📈 Sri Lanka Tourism Slows in Early April Amid Middle East Conflict
The tourism sector faced a significant deceleration in the first week of April as regional geopolitical tensions disrupted global air travel, though cumulative annual figures remain slightly ahead of 2025. • Arrivals Performance: Daily average arrivals fell to 4,953, down from 6,318 last year. In the first eight days of April, arrivals dropped 22% YoY to 39,627. • Year-to-Date (YTD) Trends: Total arrivals reached 780,261 as of April 8, maintaining a modest 1% YoY growth. This growth is primarily attributed to strong performance in January and February. • Top Source Markets (April 1–8): India remains the primary contributor with 7,495 arrivals, followed by the UK (4,045) and Australia (3,394). Other notable contributors include China (2,643) and Russia (2,064). • Cumulative Market Shares: The tourism sector continues to rely on key traditional markets. India leads YTD with 158,628 visitors, followed by the UK (82,465) and Russia (67,982). • Outlook: Industry analysts warn that prolonged aviation disruptions and Middle East tensions may threaten national targets for 2026 if travel demand remains suppressed.
CEB Orders Temporary Shutdown of Large Rooftop Solar to Stabilize Grid ⚡
The Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) has directed a temporary suspension of large-scale solar power injections to protect the national grid during the upcoming holiday season. • Targeted Capacity: Owners of rooftop solar systems exceeding 300 kW capacity are required to disconnect. • Duration: A 10-day window starting today, from 10 April to 20 April 2026. • Reasoning: The decision stems from anticipated low demand during the extended holidays paired with high solar output due to sunny weather, which creates technical imbalances. • Context: While renewable energy remains a pillar for diversification, the CEB cited current technical challenges in managing high fluctuations and excess generation during periods of minimal industrial and commercial activity. • Objective: To ensure grid stability and prevent supply interruptions for the general public during the festive period. _Note: This directive applies specifically to large-scale installations; smaller domestic systems are currently unaffected._