Business
Enterprise Analytics and IFS highlight the business value of IFS Cloud at customer event
Enterprise Analytics and IFS successfully hosted their first customer summit, which brought together many business leaders from across various industries. The event, which was designed to highlight the business benefits of IFS Cloud, was held at the Hilton Colombo.
Speakers from both organizations and current customers, the Silvermill Group, shared insights on the product roadmap, key features, implementation strategies, the value of choosing the right implementation partner, and the business value generated by utilizing IFS Cloud.
Speaking about the event, Eranda Maldeniya, Director of Enterprise Analytics, said, “I’m happy with the participation we received. It simply shows that keeping up to date with the latest technology is critical for a business to maintain a competitive edge regardless of which industry you are in. This is why we conceived Evergreen. It was a way for us to help inform some of our nation’s most prominent companies about the best-in-class technology available to them that can help unlock their true potential.”
“We believe IFS Cloud can play a significant role in making them more competitive locally as well as on the world stage, thereby securing their future growth and stimulating the long-term economic growth of Sri Lanka. When they do better, we all do better,” he added.
IFS Cloud’s state-of-the-art Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) capabilities are designed according to industry best practices with a concrete framework that leverages a mobile-first environment. The platform gives an organization complete control over its data and the ability to access it anywhere in the world using any device. Ultimately, the solution helps management achieve a seamless workplace experience for their employees and reduces business complexity, cost and risk.
“We were thrilled to partner with Enterprise Analytics on Evergreen,” said Uthpala Kumara, Head of Sales and Partnerships, IFS South Asia. “Events like this help share vital knowledge that can accelerate a company’s digital transformation and improve its competitiveness in the marketplace. IFS Cloud was designed to offer companies an uncomplicated path towards becoming more data-driven and help improve innovation. It is a scalable solution that can be used across all business functions and connect global operations. We believe it will facilitate companies in delivering exceptional moments of service.”
IFS develops and delivers enterprise software for companies worldwide which manufacture and distribute goods, build and maintain assets, and manage service-focused operations. Within a single platform, its industry-specific products are innately connected to a single data model and use embedded digital innovation so businesses can be their best when it matters to their customers—at the Moment of Service™.
Enterprise Analytics is an ERP and software development company that delivers strategic change to businesses globally. The company’s team of IFS-certified consultants have the deep domain knowledge and extensive experience needed to accommodate the unique needs of organizations across a myriad of industries. With offices in Asia, the Middle East, Australia, the UK and America, EA’s specialist teams are able to deliver exceptional service across geographies. This broad reach has also allowed the company to offer 24×7 global support, thus guaranteeing their promise of Transformation Driven by People.
Business
Cabinet approves recognition of ‘Sri Lanka National Export Development Plan – 2026–2030’
The Cabinet of Ministers has approved the resolution furnished by the Minister of Industries and Entrepreneurship Development to recognize the “Sri Lanka National Export
Development Plan – 2026–2030” as the official strategic framework for export development and promotion of exports in Sri Lanka.
The Sri Lanka Export Development Board, in collaboration with public and private sector stakeholders connected to the export sector, has formulated the National Export Development Plan 2026–2030 by obtaining technical assistance under the Policy-Based Lending Programme of the Asian Development Bank.
The aforementioned Plan provides a comprehensive strategic framework to guide and monitor Sri Lanka’s export development process, with the target of earning US$ 36 billion in foreign exchange through the export of goods and services by the year 2030
Business
Sri Lanka eyes India grid link as ADB pushes Pan-Asia energy integration
Sri Lanka’s long-discussed electricity grid connection with India is gaining renewed momentum, as the Asian Development Bank (ADB) intensifies efforts to promote cross-border energy integration across the region.
At the ADB Annual Meetings in Samarkand, Senior Director for Energy, Priyantha Wijayatunga, identified the proposed India–Sri Lanka grid interconnection as the most promising avenue to strengthen the island’s power sector. The concept dates back to the 1970s, when Sri Lanka, following the completion of the Mahaweli Development Project, even explored the possibility of exporting electricity. However, rapid economic growth and rising domestic demand shifted the country toward energy imports.
Today, with energy security and cost pressures mounting, the idea has regained urgency. “The time is right,” Wijayatunga said, stressing that political will and financing will be decisive. While undersea transmission cables make the link technically viable, costs remain a major challenge. The ADB, he confirmed, stands ready to support Sri Lanka as a development partner in advancing the project.
Sri Lanka’s prospects are closely tied to a broader regional vision being advanced by the ADB through its Pan-Asia Power Grid Initiative (PAGI). The initiative aims to transform how energy is produced, shared, and consumed across Asia and the Pacific by promoting cross-border electricity trade and grid connectivity.
PAGI is designed not merely as a collection of projects, but as a systems-level integration platform that connects national grids into subregional and eventually continent-wide networks. Its core objectives include bridging energy gaps, enhancing energy security, integrating large-scale renewable energy, and strengthening resilience across interconnected systems.
A key pillar of PAGI is leveraging the region’s resource complementarity. Countries in South Asia, for instance, possess uneven but highly complementary energy resources—hydropower in Nepal and Bhutan, and solar and wind potential in India. By linking grids, countries like Sri Lanka could tap into these diverse energy sources, reducing dependence on costly fossil fuel imports while improving reliability.
ADB estimates suggest that deeper regional power trade in South Asia could yield substantial economic benefits, including lower system costs and more efficient energy distribution. The initiative also envisions mobilizing up to $50 billion in investments by 2035, expanding transmission infrastructure, and improving electricity access for millions.
For Sri Lanka, integration into such a regional grid could be transformative. A connection with India would allow the country to import affordable electricity during shortages, stabilize supply, and support its transition toward cleaner energy. It could also open the door to future participation in a wider South Asian power market.
With feasibility studies and policy discussions already underway, and with ADB backing firmly in place, Sri Lanka’s long-envisioned grid connection with India now appears more achievable than ever.
As the Samarkand meetings underscore the urgency of regional cooperation in an increasingly uncertain energy landscape, Sri Lanka stands at the threshold of a new chapter—one where energy security is strengthened not in isolation, but through connection.
by Sanath Nanayakkare in Samarkand, Uzbekistan
Business
Oceans in crisis: Sri Lanka hosts ‘Sharks International 2026’ amid stark warnings
Sri Lanka this week finds itself at the centre of a deepening global ocean crisis, as leading scientists, policymakers and conservationists gather in Colombo for Sharks International 2026—a high-profile summit unfolding against mounting evidence that the world is rapidly losing control of its marine ecosystems.
The conference, now underway at the Bandaranaike Memorial International Conference Hall, marks the first time the prestigious forum has been hosted in Sri Lanka. But beneath the diplomatic language and scientific exchanges lies a far more urgent reality: the collapse of shark and ray populations is no longer a distant environmental concern—it is an unfolding economic and food security emergency.
More than 100 million sharks and rays are being wiped out globally each year, largely due to overfishing and illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. In Sri Lanka, the situation is particularly acute. Of the 105 species recorded in local waters, nearly 70 are now threatened with extinction, a statistic that scientists warn should set off alarm bells far beyond conservation circles.
Deputy Minister of Environment Anton Jayakody did not mince words when addressing the gathering, framing the issue not just as an ecological tragedy but as a looming economic shock.
“This is not just about saving species. It is about protecting the foundation of our fisheries, our food systems, and the livelihoods of thousands of Sri Lankans. If shark and ray populations collapse, the consequences will ripple through the entire marine economy,” he said.
Sharks and rays sit at the top of the ocean food chain. Their disappearance disrupts the delicate balance of marine ecosystems, triggering cascading effects that can decimate commercially valuable fish stocks. For a country like Sri Lanka—where coastal communities depend heavily on fisheries—this is not an abstract threat but a direct challenge to economic stability.
Yet despite years of warnings, critics argue that global action has been dangerously slow, fragmented, and often undermined by competing commercial interests.
By Ifham Nizam
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