Business
CEAT Kelani scores double win at World HRD Congress Sri Lanka Awards
CEAT Kelani Holdings has been recognised as Sri Lanka’s Employer Brand of the Year 2025, while its Vice President – Human Resources, Thushara Hettithantrige, was honoured as a ‘Topmost HR Leader of Sri Lanka’ at the 2025 World HRD Congress Sri Lanka awards presentation held in Colombo recently.
The evaluation process for the Sri Lanka awards was based on criteria that encompassed brand strategy, employee value proposition, recruitment and retention, diversity and inclusion, employer reputation, innovation, creativity and outcomes.
The World HRD Congress is a global platform for human resource professionals founded by Dr. R. L. Bhatia, with a dynamic presence across Asia, Africa and the GCC. It is governed and run by professionals and HR leaders across multiple countries with the objective of bringing them together on a single platform.
These latest accolades affirm CEAT Kelani’s commitment to aligning its business and HR strategies to nurture a truly happy workforce and sustain a culture built on shared values. With a strength of more than 1,000 employees – including over 150 who have dedicated two decades of service – the Company has consistently set benchmarks in employee engagement, retention and overall workplace wellbeing.
Transparent performance management systems, talent development initiatives, succession planning, career management programmes, and a healthy partnership with its Trade Union are integral to CEAT’s employee value proposition, the Company said.
“We also prioritise work-life balance and employee welfare through activities that extend to families, and implement HR policies that emphasise internal recruitment, job enrichment, job rotation, and career planning and provide special loan schemes for professional qualifications,” CEAT Kelani Chief Executive Officer & Managing Director, Ravi Dadlani, said. “Additionally, our robust recognition and rewards policy celebrates employees who deliver exceptional value through innovation.”
These elements have helped CEAT Kelani distinguish itself as an employer of choice in Sri Lanka and have earned the Company a reputation for building a resilient and motivated workforce dedicated to driving innovation and growth.
Ranked Sri Lanka’s most valuable tyre brand by Brand Finance and as the ‘Most Loved Tyre Brand’ in Sri Lanka in 2025 by LMD, CEAT is Sri Lanka’s highest-selling tyre brand, with over 1.2 million tyres sold annually. CEAT Kelani’s rise to market leadership is underpinned by sustained investments in technology, innovation and capacity. The Company’s manufacturing operations encompass pneumatic tyres for passenger cars, vans, SUVs, commercial vehicles (bias-ply and radial), motorcycles, three-wheelers and agricultural vehicles.
Besides accounting for half of Sri Lanka’s tyre requirements CEAT Kelani exports around 20 per cent of its output to 16 countries. Over the past decade, the joint venture has invested more than Rs. 8.5 billion in Sri Lanka and committed another Rs 4.5 billion over the next 18 months, strengthening its position as a vital contributor to the local economy and a trusted partner to the nation’s transport sector.
Business
Sri Lanka betting its tourism future on cold, hard numbers
National Airport Exit Survey tells quite a story
Australia’s role here is strategic, not charitable
In a quiet but significant shift, Sri Lanka’s tourism sector is moving beyond traditional destination marketing and instinct-based planning. The recent launch of the “From Data to Decisions” initiative jointly backed by Australia’s Market Development Facility and the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority, sent an unambiguous message: sentiment is out, statistics are in.
The initiative is anchored by a 12-month National Airport Exit Survey, a trove of data covering 16,000 travellers. The findings sketch a new traveller profile: nearly half are young (20–35), independent, and book online. Galle, Ella, and Sigiriya are the hotspots; women travellers outnumber men; and a promising 45% plan to return. This isn’t just trivia. It’s a strategic blueprint. If Sri Lanka Tourism listens, it can tailor everything from infrastructure to marketing, moving from guesswork to precision.
The keynote speaker, Deputy Minister Prof. Ruwan Ranasinghe called data “a vital pillar of tourism transformation.” Yet the unspoken truth is that Sri Lanka has long relied on generic appeals -beaches, heritage, smiles. In today’s crowded market, that’s no longer enough. As SLTDA Chairman Buddhika Hewawasam noted, this partnership is about “elevating how we collect, analyse, and use data.”
Australia’s role here is strategic, not charitable. By funding research and advocating for a Tourism Satellite Account, it is helping Sri Lanka build a tourism sector that is both sustainable and measurable. Australian High Commissioner Matthew Duckworth linked this support to “global standards of environmental protection” – a clear nod to the growing demand for green travel. This isn’t just aid; it’s influence through insight.
“The real test lies ahead,” a tourism expert told The Island. “Data is only as good as the decisions it drives. Will these insights overcome bureaucratic inertia? Will marketing budgets actually follow the evidence toward younger, independent, female travellers?,” he asked.
“The comprehensive report promised for early 2026 must move swiftly from recommendation to action. In an era where destinations are discovered on Instagram and planned with algorithms, intuition alone is a high-stakes gamble. This forum made one thing clear: Sri Lanka is finally building its future on what visitors actually do – not just what we hope they’ll do. The numbers are in. Now, the industry must dare to follow them,” he said.
By Sanath Nanayakkare
Business
New ATA Chair champions Asia’s small tea farmers, unveils ambitious agenda
In his inaugural address as the new Chairman of the Asia Tea Alliance (ATA), Nimal Udugampola placed the region’s millions of smallholders at the core of the global tea industry’s future, asserting they are the “indispensable engine” of a sector that produces over 90% of the world’s tea.
Udugampola, who is also Chairman of Sri Lanka’s Tea Smallholdings Development Authority, used his speech at the 6th ATA Summit held in Colombo on Nov. 27 to declare that the prosperity of Asian tea is “entirely contingent” on the resilience of its small-scale farmers, who have historically been overlooked by premium global markets.
“In Sri Lanka, smallholders account for over 75% of our national production. Across Asia, millions of families maintain the quality and character of our regional teas,” he stated, accepting the chairmanship for the 2025-2027 term.
To empower this vital community, Udugampola unveiled a vision focused on Sustainability, Equity, and Digital Transformation. The strategic agenda includes:
Climate Resilience: Promoting climate-smart agriculture and regenerative farming to protect smallholdings from environmental disruption.
Digital Equity: Leveraging technology like blockchain to create farm-to-cup traceability, connecting smallholders directly with premium consumers and ensuring fair value.
Market Expansion: Driving innovation in tea products and marketing to attract younger consumers and enter non-traditional markets.
Standard Harmonization: Establishing common regional quality and sustainability standards to protect the “Asian Tea” brand and push for stable, fair pricing.
Linking the alliance’s goals to national ambition, Udugampola highlighted Sri Lanka’s target of producing 400 million kilograms of tea by 2030. He presented the country’s “Pivithuru Tea Initiative” as a model for other ATA nations, designed to achieve this through smallholder empowerment, digitalization, and aligned policy objectives.
By Sanath Nanayakkare
Business
Brandix recognised as Green Brand of Year at SLIM Awards 2025
Brandix Apparel Solutions was recognised as the Green Brand of the Year at the Sri Lanka Institute of Marketing (SLIM) Brand Excellence Awards 2025, taking home Silver, the highest award presented in the category this year.
The ‘Green Brand of the Year’ recognises the brand that drives measurable environmental impact through sustainable practices, climate-aligned goals and long-term commitment to protecting natural resources.
A pioneer in responsible apparel manufacturing for over two decades, Brandix has championed best practices in the sphere of sustainable manufacturing covering environmental, social, and governance aspects. The company built the world’s first Net Zero Carbon-certified apparel manufacturing facility (across Scope 1 and Scope 2) and meets over 60% of its energy requirement in Sri Lanka via renewable sources.
Head of ESG at Brandix, Nirmal Perera, said: “Being recognised as Green Brand of the Year is an encouraging milestone for our teams working across sustainability.”
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