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SL gets Rs 452 mn for saving ill-fated tanker: Rs. 3.4 bn asked for

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By Ifham Nizam and Rathindra Kuruwita

The Marine Enviro-nment Protection Authority (MEPA) yesterday received Rs. 452 million from London for having saved MT New Diamond, a super oil tanker that caught fire in the Sri Lanka’s territorial waters last year.

MEPA General Manager, Dr. P. B. Terney Pradeep Kumara told The Island that Rs. 442 million had come for the services rendered by the Sri Lanka Navy, MEPA and Rs. 10 million by way of a fine imposed on the Ship’s Captain.

However, Sri Lanka has to receive a much larger amount for the damage caused to the marine environment, Dr. Kumara said. Following the incident, Sri Lankan authorities filed charges against the Captain of the ill-fated vessel and made a claim for $2.4 million from the ship’s owners for the firefighting and pollution prevention efforts.

Twenty experts from the Universities of Moratuwa, Ruhuna and Sri Jayewardenepura submitted their recommendations as regards the damage to the environment, to the Attorney General. Based on the report, the Attorney General’s Department had asked for Rs. 3.4 billion (around USD 19 million) as compensation for environmental damage, the Coordinating Officer for the Attorney General, state counsel Nishara Jayaratne said.

Soon they would have discussions with the lawyers of the shipping agent concerned on compensation for environmental damage caused, she said.

Dr. Kumara, who is the former Head of the Department of Oceanography/Marine Geology of the Ruhuna University, said that the incident had caused deaths among marine species due to spillage of some toxic fuel from the vessel.

The MT New Diamond crude oil tanker was transporting 270,000 MT oil from the port of Meena Al Ahmadi in Kuwait to the Port of Paradip in India when a fire broke out in its engine room as the vessel was passing the eastern seas of Sri Lanka on September 3, 2020.



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Sri Lanka’s coastline faces unfolding catastrophe: Expert

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Sri Lanka is standing on the edge of a coastal catastrophe, with the nation’s lifeline rapidly eroding under the combined assault of climate change, reckless development and weak compliance, Director General of the Department of Coast Conservation and Coastal Resource Management (DCC&CRM) Dr. Terney Pradeep Kumara has warned.

“This is no longer an environmental warning we can afford to ignore. The crisis is already unfolding before our eyes,” Dr. Kumara told The Island, cautioning that the degradation of Sri Lanka’s 1,620-kilometre coastline has reached a point where delayed action could trigger irreversible damage to ecosystems, livelihoods and national security.

He said accelerating coastal erosion, rising sea levels, saltwater intrusion and the collapse of natural barriers, such as coral reefs and mangroves, are placing entire coastal communities at risk. “When mangroves disappear and reefs are destroyed, villages lose their first line of defence. What follows are floods, loss of homes, declining fisheries and forced displacement,” he said.

Dr. Kumara stressed that the coastline is not merely a development frontier but the backbone of Sri Lanka’s economy and cultural identity. “More than half of our tourism assets, fisheries and key infrastructure are concentrated along the coast.

If the coast fails, the economy will feel the shock immediately,” he warned.

Condemning unregulated construction, illegal sand mining and environmentally blind infrastructure projects, he said short-term economic interests are pushing the coastline towards collapse. “We cannot keep fixing one eroding beach while creating three new erosion sites elsewhere. That is not management—it is destruction,” he said, calling for science-driven, ecosystem-based solutions instead of politically convenient quick fixes.

The Director General said the Department is intensifying enforcement and shifting towards integrated coastal zone management, but warned that laws alone will not save the coast. “This is a shared responsibility. Policymakers, developers, local authorities and the public must understand that every illegal structure, every destroyed mangrove, weakens the island’s natural shield,” he added.

With climate change intensifying storms and sea surges, Dr. Kumara warned that Sri Lanka’s vulnerability will only worsen without urgent, coordinated national action. “The sea has shaped this nation’s history and protected it for centuries. If we fail to protect the coast today, we will be remembered as the generation that allowed the island itself to be slowly eaten away,” he went on to say.

By Ifham Nizam

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SOC examines proposed amendments to the Microfinance and Credit Regulatory Authority Bill

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SoC meeting underway (pic courtesy parliament)

The Sectoral Oversight Committee (SoC)on Economic Development and International Relations recently examined the Microfinance and Credit Regulatory Authority Bill and the proposed amendments thereto.

The SoC met in Parliament under the chairmanship of Member of Parliament Ms. Lakmali Hemachandra, (Attorney at Law). A group of officials representing the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, the Department of Development Finance of the Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development, and the Legal Draftsman’s Department participated in the meeting.

The Microfinance and Credit Regulatory Authority Bill was presented to Parliament for its First Reading on 26.11.2025. Accordingly, the Committee held an extensive discussion on the amendments that have been proposed to the Bill. The Chair of the Committee, Hon. Member of Parliament Ms. Lakmali Hemachandra, (Attorney at Law) stated that it is important to give careful and further consideration to this Bill and that discussions on the proposed amendments will be held again on a future date.

Members of Parliament Lakshman Nipuna Arachchi, Thilina Samarakoon, Nilanthi Kottahachchi, Attorney at Law, Sagarika Athauda, Attorney at Law, Suranga Ratnayaka, and Wijesiri Basnayake also participated in this Committee meeting.

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CEB–NTPC joint venture seeks investors for 50 MW Sampur solar project

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The Trincomalee Power Company (TPC)—a 50:50 joint venture between the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) and India’s NTPC—has called for international tenders for a 50-megawatt solar power plant with battery storage at Sampur in Trincomalee, in a move expected to draw strong investor interest amid Sri Lanka’s accelerating shift towards utility-scale renewables.

Tender documents invite bidders to undertake the complete engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) of the ground-mounted solar photovoltaic plant, together with a minimum 20 MW / 20 MWh battery energy storage system, positioning the project as a commercially attractive, grid-stabilising asset in the Eastern Province.

Bids will be accepted until February 18, 2026, and opened on February 19, with the successful contractor required to complete the project within 21 months of award—offering investors clear timelines and execution certainty, officials said.

Energy sector sources noted that the project benefits from sovereign backing through the CEB and the balance-sheet strength and technical credibility of NTPC, India’s largest power utility, significantly lowering counterparty and execution risk for developers and financiers.

The Sampur site carries strategic importance in Sri Lanka’s energy landscape. Initially designated for a 500 MW coal-fired power plant under an earlier Indo-Lanka agreement, the project was abandoned in 2016 following environmental opposition. Its re-development as a solar-plus-storage facility signals a policy pivot towards cleaner generation while unlocking the value of a long-idle, infrastructure-ready site.

Analysts said the inclusion of battery storage enhances the project’s bankability by improving dispatchability and grid reliability—key considerations for investors as Sri Lanka integrates higher shares of intermittent renewable energy.

The Sampur solar project also strengthens India–Sri Lanka energy cooperation at a time when regional power security, supply diversification and climate-aligned investments are gaining prominence among institutional investors.

Sri Lanka’s target of sourcing 70% of electricity from renewables by 2030 has sharpened demand for large, utility-scale projects backed by state entities. Market observers said the Sampur project could emerge as a benchmark transaction for future solar and storage investments, particularly in repurposing former thermal power sites into commercially viable clean-energy assets.

By Ifham Nizam

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