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Sri Lanka’s Digital Decade: ‘The role Port City Colombo must play’

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IndIka de Zoysa

“Opportunities do not wait. If you hesitate, someone else will seize them.” — Lee Kuan Yew

When policymakers, investors and industry leaders discuss Sri Lanka’s economic transformation, the conversation almost always arrives at the same conclusion. The gap between where the country is and where it needs to be is real, but the ingredients to close it are already present.

That observation is correct. But it misses something important.

Ingredients alone do not build a competitive economy. What converts potential into performance is a platform, a concentrated environment where the right regulatory conditions, physical infrastructure, and commercial frameworks exist together, at a standard that global enterprises demand.

Without such an assurance, multinational companies are unlikely to commit the significant capital required to shift or establish operations in a new location. Sri Lanka has been building toward that platform for some time. However, in light of the ongoing and unprecedented shifts in the global economy, the time for bold and decisive action is now.

What the Next Decade Can Look Like

When Dubai Internet City made its foundational infrastructure decisions in the early 2000s, few predicted it would grow to host over 4,000 companies and 31,000 professionals, adding AED 100 billion to the emirate’s economy over fifteen years, drawing not just technology firms, but financial services, media, and professional services enterprises seeking a stable regulatory platform.

Similarly, GIFT City in India, dismissed as overambitious when first ideated in 2007, crossed 1,150 registered entities by February 2026 with yearly growth that few analysts had modelled. Today it hosts banks, asset managers, insurance firms, and technology companies, a multi-sector ecosystem built on institutional certainty.

Companies come, talent follows, education institutions establish, and supporting services build around the ecosystem. What begins as a zone becomes an economy within an economy. That is the trajectory Port City Colombo is positioned to follow.

What Port City Colombo Brings to the Table

Port City Colombo’s architecture is designed for exactly this kind of investment. Dollarised transactions, an independent regulatory commission, English-language commercial frameworks, and a structure that lets international companies establish fully on their own terms. The independent regulatory framework ensures institutional continuity beyond political cycles, a critical factor for long-term capital deployment. For multinational enterprises evaluating where to establish regional operations, whether in financial services, technology, logistics, or professional services, these are the conditions that determine whether a location makes the shortlist at all.

The early traction is visible. More than half of the companies registered as Authorised Persons operate in IT and technology-enabled services. By late 2025, approximately 1 million square feet of office space was occupied, with the Business Centre reflecting occupancy levels above 95%. IFS has announced a facility expected to create 1,000 jobs. Recent amendments to the Colombo Port City Economic Commission Act have strengthened governance and streamlined regulatory oversight.

What converts early momentum into sustained growth is infrastructure readiness: reliable connectivity, stable power, and clear regulatory frameworks around cross-border operations. Get that right early, and the impact compounds. From resilience to transformation, Port City Colombo plays a pivotal role. It expands Sri Lanka’s economic capacity rather than substituting for existing hubs, creating new opportunities that strengthen the entire system. Infrastructure brings companies, companies bring talent, talent brings capital, and that sequence, once started, turns into a virtuous cycle that can help revitalize other sectors of the Sri Lankan economy.

Sri Lanka already has natural advantages. Five subsea cable landing stations connect the country to the global data network. Port City Colombo adds the institutional and commercial layer that converts that connectivity into something a global company can actually build on.

The Corridor and the Talent

Sri Lanka’s geography is one of its most underused arguments. Sitting at the intersection of the Asia-Middle East-Africa maritime and data corridor, handling over 15% of South Asia’s transshipment volume, and able to engage Indian, Gulf, Chinese and Western commercial interests simultaneously without alignment to any single bloc, few locations in the Indian Ocean can offer the same reach. For global enterprises, that neutrality translates directly into commercial resilience.

Sri Lanka is building toward a national workforce target of 300,000 professionals across technology, finance, logistics, and advanced services. Brain drain has complicated that trajectory, but global education institutions establishing within Port City Colombo represent a direct structural solution. Training talent for zone-based companies while positioning Colombo as a regional destination for skilled professionals across multiple sectors.

Sri Lanka’s Digital Decade: Port City is the Platform We Need

Regional competitors are investing heavily in the economic infrastructure and institutional frameworks that attract high-value cross-sector investment. The decisions that determine which cities and zones capture the next wave of global capital and enterprise activity are being made now, not in five years.

Sri Lanka has what it needs to compete. Realised FDI inflows grew 72% in 2025, crossing $1 billion for the first time. The conditions are converging in a way they have not before. What this moment requires is the institutional and infrastructure certainty that converts that potential into something global companies can actually point to and say: this works, and we are building here.

Dubai Internet City took fifteen years to add AED 100 billion to Dubai’s economy. GIFT City crossed 1,150 registered entities after two decades of sustained institutional commitment. Sri Lanka now has everything those success stories started with: the geography, the framework, the connectivity infrastructure, and investment confidence that grew 72% in a single year.

If we play our cards right, Port City Colombo is where Sri Lanka’s digital decade gets built.

By Indika de Zoysa, Vice President, Computer Society of Sri Lanka; Immediate Past Chairman, FITIS



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Conservation now a business imperative, WNPS tells corporate sector

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The felicitation of speakers at the end of the WNPS event

Environmental crises in Sri Lanka are no longer merely conservation issues but constitute an economic and corporate survival challenge that directly threatens the country’s water security, agriculture, exports and long-term business sustainability, speakers at the latest monthly lecture of the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society of Sri Lanka (WNPS) warned on Thursday.

At a time when climate shocks, biodiversity collapse and environmental degradation are beginning to impact supply chains, tourism, food production and investor confidence, the lecture titled “Conservation in Action: Driving Impact – Hill Country to Courtrooms: Science, Community and the Next Generation in Action” highlighted how conservation is increasingly becoming intertwined with economics, corporate governance and national resilience.

Held at the Bandaranaike Memorial International Conference Hall with support from Nations Trust Bank, the event drew leading corporate executives, conservationists, lawyers, architects, researchers and youth leaders.

Corporate leader and conservation advocate Sriyan de Silva Wijeyeratne delivered one of the strongest messages of the evening, stressing that Sri Lanka’s montane ecosystems were effectively the economic backbone of the nation.

“You block up the montane region, we lose our water, our agriculture and our exports, he said.

His remarks reflected a growing global shift where environmental protection is increasingly viewed not as philanthropy, but as a strategic investment linked directly to economic continuity and climate resilience.

Wijeyeratne explained how the WNPS-led “Plant” initiative has rapidly evolved into one of Sri Lanka’s most ambitious privately supported ecological restoration programmes, demonstrating how businesses can move beyond traditional corporate social responsibility into measurable environmental investment.

Within just five years, the initiative has begun restoring around 200 acres of degraded landscapes while establishing approximately 30 kilometres of ecological corridors in the central highlands.

Importantly, he said, the programme was designed not to centralise conservation under a single organisation but to create a scalable model for wider private-sector adoption.

“We are not trying to become the answer. Plant is meant to prove that private-sector-led restoration is possible and that businesses can actively participate in rebuilding ecosystems, he said.

The initiative already involves partnerships with multiple private-sector stakeholders investing in ecological restoration in the hill country — an area critical to tea, hydropower, water resources and downstream agriculture.

One of the clearest examples discussed during the lecture was the growing collaboration between conservationists and Sri Lanka’s architectural and urban planning sectors.

Following discussions initiated at the Geoffrey Bawa Trust, the prestigious Geoffrey Bawa architectural awards were restructured into the “Monamal Award,” recognising projects that integrate biodiversity, ecosystem restoration and environmentally sensitive design.

“This is about redefining what good development means, Wijeyeratne said.

“The future gold standard of architecture must be buildings and landscapes that embrace ecosystems rather than destroy them.”

The lecture also explored how climate change is reshaping social vulnerability and labour resilience — key concerns for businesses operating in agriculture, plantations and rural economies.

Wildlife photographer and conservationist Riaz Cader highlighted another emerging business concern — the growing interaction between wildlife and human-dominated production landscapes.

Supported by LOLC Holdings, the WNPS leopard conservation initiative has established research stations in Belihuloya and Kotagala to study leopards living within tea plantation regions.

Using community-based data collection, camera trap technology and local informer networks, researchers are mapping leopard movement, conflict zones and habitat fragmentation across estate landscapes.

Cader noted that increasing human pressure had altered leopard behaviour significantly.

“We have effectively pushed many of these leopards into nocturnal behaviour because of constant human activity, he said.

The research has major implications for plantation management, land-use planning and biodiversity compliance standards increasingly demanded by global markets and sustainability certification bodies.

Cader also pointed to encouraging signs emerging from restored habitats such as Budunwala, where camera traps recorded a mother leopard and cub moving freely during daylight hours — behaviour rarely observed in heavily disturbed environments.

Researchers have additionally documented elusive rusty-spotted cats and pangolins at restoration sites, reinforcing the ecological value of reconnecting fragmented landscapes.

Beyond biodiversity outcomes, the restoration programmes are generating direct socio-economic benefits.

The lecture further revealed how conservation organisations are increasingly engaging with law enforcement and governance systems to combat environmental crime — another growing risk area with economic implications.

WNPS recently launched a specialised police training programme at the Rodella Hill Club aimed at strengthening enforcement against illegal wildlife trade, snaring and poaching in the hill country.

Speakers warned that organised wildlife crime, habitat destruction and illegal exploitation of natural resources continue to undermine both biodiversity and sustainable economic development.

Questions from the audience also broadened the discussion into marine ecosystems and blue economy concerns, including the lingering environmental and economic fallout from the X-Press Pearl Disaster.

WNPS officials said their marine subcommittee was actively engaged in mangrove restoration, blue carbon ecosystem protection and marine conservation initiatives.

They noted that Sri Lanka’s mangrove restoration efforts had already received international recognition through UN-backed environmental awards.

Throughout the evening, speakers repeatedly stressed that conservation is no longer the exclusive responsibility of scientists or environmental activists.

By Ifham Nizam

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JAAF reaffirms confidence in long-term strength of Sri Lanka’s apparel industry

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Sri Lanka’s apparel exports recorded a softer performance in April 2026, with total exports declining by 4.72% to US$ 328.15 million, compared to US$ 344.40 million in April 2025. The decline was mainly seen across key traditional markets, with exports to the UK down 16.91%, the EU down 8.78%, and the USA down 3.46%. However, the 12.61% growth in other markets during April shows that there is still room to build momentum through greater market diversification.

For the period from January to April 2026, total apparel exports declined by 7.47% to US$ 1.53 billion, reflecting continued pressure across major export destinations. While this performance reflects challenging global demand conditions, it also reinforces the need for Sri Lanka to sharpen its competitiveness, improve cost structures, strengthen market access, and move faster into higher-value opportunities.

JAAF believes the industry’s long-term strength remains intact, but the path forward requires a more focused national effort. To move beyond current export levels and work towards breaking the US$ 5 billion barrier, Sri Lanka must support the sector with policy consistency, energy cost reforms, trade facilitation, skills development, and stronger positioning in both traditional and emerging markets. The apparel industry continues to be one of Sri Lanka’s most important foreign exchange earners, and its ability to recover and grow will be critical to the country’s broader export economy.

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hSenidBiz delivers major FY2026 turnaround with USD 5.5M ARR

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Dinesh Saparamadu

Recurring revenues reach 74% of total; Normalized EBITDA margin expands 17 percentage points

hSenid Business Solutions PLC (hSenidBiz) announced its financial results for the fourth quarter and full year ended 31 March 2026, delivering a significant turnaround in operational profitability, materially improving earnings quality, and achieving a key strategic milestone.

In the fourth quarter, total revenue reached LKR 522.2 million, up 5 percent year-on-year (YoY). The PeoplesHR Cloud segment delivered LKR 380 million, representing 20 percent YoY growth in LKR terms and 12 percent growth in USD constant currency terms, with subscription revenues comprising 87 percent of segment revenue. New deal closures recovered strongly to USD 843,395. The Company sustained profitability at the Profit Before Tax (PBT) level with LKR 7 million and a normalized EBITDA margin of 11 percent, while continuing to generate positive free cash flow.

For the full year, the Company delivered a substantial financial turnaround. Revenue grew 13 percent YoY to LKR 2.1 billion. Normalized EBITDA turned positive at LKR 200 million, with the margin expanding 17 percentage points to 10 percent. Profit Before Tax improved by LKR 313 million year-on-year, significantly reducing the loss from LKR 321 million in FY2025 to LKR 8 million. The Company also generated positive free cash flow for the year, a sharp reversal from negative free cash flow in the prior year and an annual improvement of over LKR 350 million. Exit Annualized Recurring Revenue (ARR) reached USD 5.5 million, growing 32 percent YoY, while recurring revenues strengthened to 77 percent of total revenue in the fourth quarter, underscoring the quality and resilience of the Company’s SaaS-led business model.

Dinesh Saparamadu, Founder and Chairman of hSenidBiz, commented: “FY2026 marks a clear inflection point for hSenidBiz. We have materially strengthened the quality and predictability of our revenue base while delivering meaningful operating leverage. These outcomes validate the scalability of our SaaS-led model and position the Company well for the next phase of disciplined, high-quality growth.”

Sampath Jayasundara, Chief Executive Officer, added: “The operational momentum achieved in FY2026 provides a strong foundation as we enter the next phase of growth. Our priorities for FY2027 are to accelerate customer acquisition in key markets, drive execution excellence across the sales organisation, and rapidly advance our AI-driven capabilities, particularly through Lexi Insights to deliver even greater value to enterprise customers across our markets.”

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