Business
How Samsung foldables are defining the future of smartphone innovation
When Samsung Electronics revealed its first prototype of a flexible display back in 2011, few people realized they were witnessing a glimpse into the mobile industry’s future. Now, a decade later, Samsung has shipped 4 times more foldable devices in 2021 than in 2020, exceeding the three-fold market growth that analysts expected.
Consumer enthusiasm for Samsung foldables is exemplified by the success of the Galaxy Z series. In the first month since its launch, the Galaxy Z Fold3 and Z Flip3 exceeded total accumulative sales of Samsung foldable devices in 2020.
With foldable smartphone shipments predicted to grow tenfold by 2023, let’s take a look at the key moments, top innovations and important partnerships that have helped make foldable devices the next big thing.
Bringing Foldables To Consumers Around the World
Samsung may have first introduced the concept of foldable displays in 2011, but it would take over a decade to bring foldable devices to consumers around the world.
The next major milestone came in 2019, when Samsung finally brought its foldable vision to reality with the Galaxy Fold, its first foldable device. Soon after that came the Galaxy Z Flip. The sleek clamshell design – a throwback to flip phones of yore – made the Galaxy Z Flip an instant icon.
After a decade of progress and three generations of innovation, the Galaxy Z Fold3 and Z Flip3 brought enhanced durability and an improved user experience to foldables. Not only have they set a new standard in the industry, but they rekindled consumer interest in smartphones in general.
From creating new materials and methods to overcoming mechanical challenges, creating the foldable category required Samsung to reimagine the smartphone from the inside out.
From the onset, Samsung engineers understood that the key to creating a new category would be inventing a range of new technologies to ensure the devices would meet the expectations of global consumers.
The Infinity Flex Display and Samsung UTG, for example, enabled the world’s first folding glass display. While its screen may be a continuous piece of glass, a foldable’s body features two distinct components. This unique structure meant that in order to maintain a design slim enough for daily use, engineers would have to completely rethink the placement of internal components. That challenge included designing a new internal cooling system as well as a dual-battery system with technology that optimizes multiple power sources as one.
To ensure that the devices would be capable of withstanding hundreds of thousands of folds, a Hideaway Hinge mechanism was designed with Sweeper technology to help keep out dust and dirt particles. The hinge also added a new layer of functionality to Samsung foldables, allowing them to stand on their own, which makes them perfect for watching content, making video calls, or taking hands-free selfies.
Samsung’s dedication to creating new foldable innovations enabled it to achieve yet another major milestone in 2021 with the release of the Galaxy Z Fold3 and Z Flip3 – the first foldables to receive an IPX8 water resistance rating.
Business
ADB delivers rapid support as Middle East impact spreads
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is acting quickly and decisively with $4 billion in financing to help countries withstand the impact of the Middle East conflict, including about $3 billion requested by governments and $1 billion provided as trade finance for energy and food imports.
“ADB is acting with speed and scale to support countries experiencing a range of impacts from the Middle East conflict, including pressure on finances, remittances, tourism, and fuel and fertilizer supplies,” said ADB President Masato Kanda. “At this time of acute uncertainty and risk, we are deploying our full suite of crisis response instruments—including budget support, trade finance, and a new mechanism to rapidly repurpose existing portfolio funds—to deliver the tailored and timely support our members, from large to small, need to safeguard their economies and communities.”
ADB has received formal requests for support from 15 affected governments across the region, including previously announced requests from Bangladesh, Fiji, the Philippines, and Sri Lanka. The requests, which follow a financial support package announced by ADB in late March, range in size from $15 million to $1.5 billion and include policy-based loans, countercyclical financing, rapid repurposing of existing sovereign portfolio funds, and emergency assistance loans. ADB is in discussions with an additional 4 countries facing continued impacts on their economies.
In addition to these requests, the Government of India has requested $1.5 billion in ADB financing to build and accelerate resilience and to sustain reform-based urban transformation and clean energy objectives. The proposed assistance includes a $1 billion policy-based loan under the Urban Transformation and Investment Program to sustain momentum in urban infrastructure investment and reforms, and $500 million under the Accelerating Affordable and Inclusive Rooftop Solar Systems Development Program to expand clean energy access, reduce dependence on imported fuels, strengthen domestic manufacturing, install battery energy storage systems, promote circular economy initiatives, and enhance long-term energy security.
Complementing this sovereign assistance, ADB has reactivated support for oil imports under its Trade and Supply Chain Finance Program (TSCFP) on an exceptional basis for a limited period to soften the impact of rising oil prices and supply chain disruptions. Since 1 March, ADB’s TSCFP has delivered $673 million to support oil and gas imports and $390 million for food security across 9 countries, helping maintain access to essential supplies amid global market disruptions. Trade finance support to the Cook Islands is also expected to commence soon as part of ADB’s broader support for vulnerable small island developing states.
Business
Research highlights need to empower tea smallholders for a climate-resilient future
A new study by researchers from the University of Sri Jayewardenepura and the Ministry of Irrigation argues that strengthening the knowledge and adaptive capacity of tea smallholders is critical to safeguarding the future of Sri Lanka’s tea industry in the face of climate change.
The study, titled “Enhancing Climate Resilience through Informal Education: The Case of Tea Smallholder Farmers in Sri Lanka,” was authored by Dr. Nuwan Gunarathne, Mahendra Peiris, Thilini Cooray and G.W. Dimalka Perera. It examines the growing challenges confronting tea smallholders and identifies practical measures that can help build a more resilient and sustainable tea sector.
Tea smallholders account for more than 74 percent of Sri Lanka’s total tea production, making them the backbone of one of the country’s most important export industries. However, many farmers are struggling with declining productivity and profitability due to labour shortages, limited technical knowledge, inefficient farming practices and the use of poor-quality agricultural inputs. These long-standing problems are now being exacerbated by climate change.
The researchers note that irregular rainfall patterns, prolonged droughts, rising temperatures and soil degradation are increasingly affecting tea yields and farmer incomes. They also point to inefficiencies in fertiliser use, observing that Sri Lanka currently applies nearly one kilogram of fertiliser to produce one kilogram of made tea, despite actual nutrient replacement requirements being significantly lower. This not only raises production costs but also contributes to environmental degradation.
According to the study, climate-smart agriculture and regenerative farming practices offer practical pathways to address these challenges. Techniques such as rainwater harvesting, micro-irrigation, drought-tolerant crop varieties, improved canopy management and organic soil enhancement can help farmers maintain productivity while reducing dependence on costly chemical inputs. Several locally developed innovations, including herbicide-free integrated weed management, deep envelope forking and stripe spreading of tea bushes, have already demonstrated promising results in improving yields, restoring soil health and enhancing resilience to climate stress.
However, the authors emphasise that technology alone is insufficient. Farmer education and capacity building are equally important.
Business
Sri Lanka lands a spot in elite Global Actuarial Boot Camp
‘Goodbye to guesswork, hello to hard numbers for a more secure financial future’
Sri Lanka has just secured a coveted seat at a high-powered global table – one where number-crunchers don’t just balance spreadsheets but help save economies from disaster. The country has been selected for the UNDP–Milliman Global Actuarial Initiative (GAIN), a kind of financial “special forces” training programme for developing nations.
When The Island Financial Review told an actuarial expert at a roundtable held at the Kingsbury Colombo on June 12 that it knew little about what an actuary does, this is how she explained it: “Think of actuaries as the fortune-tellers of finance. We use maths, data, and risk models to answer questions like: Will our pension system survive an ageing population? Can insurance handle a flood of climate disasters? For too long, Sri Lanka has lacked enough of these experts. GAIN aims to fix that.”
When asked to elaborate, she continued: “The initiative, a brainchild of the UN Development Programme and Milliman Inc., a global actuarial heavyweight, was launched in 2022 at the UN General Assembly. Since then, it has spread to 16 countries, mobilised over 185 Milliman volunteers, and delivered more than 32,000 hours of pro-bono brainpower – meaning, free expert insights. Now, it’s Sri Lanka’s turn.”
From 8–12 June 2026, Milliman ambassadors were on the ground, huddling with everyone from the Insurance Regulatory Commission and the Insurance Association to universities, chartered accountants, and local insurers. Their mission was to diagnose the country’s actuarial strengths and weaknesses – and then build a battle plan.
That plan takes the form of the Sri Lanka Actuarial Capacity Roadmap (2026–2028). It will spell out how to plug skills gaps, boost professional training, and apply actuarial smarts to national priorities like social protection and disaster risk financing.
As part of the programme, a two-day professionalism boot camp was delivered to members of the Actuarial Association of Sri Lanka (AASL) – the island’s official actuarial body, recognised by regulators in 2024.
The mission wrapped on 12 June with a stakeholder workshop to refine the roadmap, to which the financial media had also been invited to spread the word about the little-known but key number-crunchers. The core responsibility of actuaries is to ensure a future where Sri Lanka doesn’t just react to crises but calculates their odds – and beats them.
“This isn’t just about maths,” another AASL member told The Island Financial Review. “It’s about economic resilience, financial security, and sustainable development, powered by people who can see the future in a formula.”
The event reflected the need for a clear policy-level commitment to strengthening actuarial studies in Sri Lanka at national level, rather than allowing a handful of gifted math brains to go abroad and struggle through costly, self-funded qualifications to become actuarial experts.
By Sanath Nanayakkare
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