Business
BIA to earn Rs. 700/- per taxi from PickMe
Under a new agreement between the Airport & Aviation Services (Sri Lanka) (Private) Ltd., and PickMe, the app based ride hailing company will operate a taxi stand within the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA). The new arrangement will bring an additional revenue of Rs. 700/- per vehicle to the BIA while making it easier to monitor tourist arrivals, a PickMe news release said.
“We will be generating a daily report to the airport and keeping authorities updated on our vehicle movements. Apart from the BIA, this will also help the tourism industry to gauge arrivals and departures of free individual travellers (FITs) which will help the industry to understand their stays and travel patterns within the island. From the user point of view i.e. foreign tourists, they will have access to a transparent system that will allow them to travel from the BIA to any part of the country at a very reasonable cost,” it said.
“PickMe is already popular amongst video bloggers who travel all over the country, giving useful data to travellers across the world. They have already highlighted that PickMe rates are less than half of what other taxi services stationed at the BIA offers,” says Zulfer Jiffry, CEO of PickMe, adding that the company looks forward to working with the airport to increase and improve Customer Experiences at the airport.
Thenreleasefurther said all Airport trips will have PickMe’s Insurance cover for hospitalisation and Life. The company also has the additional advantage of ride tracking on their app, which enables loved ones to easily see their movements even when overseas. This not only increases the safety factor, but also ensures peace of mind for tourists and their families.
Currently the PickMe stand is a 100 square foot area located at the Tourist Exit area of the BIA. They operate 24/7 and will at any given time have a driver at the counter as well as vehicles parked in their allotted slot at the BIA car park. The company is in negotiations with the Airport and Aviation Services (Sri Lanka) (Private) Ltd., to have a dedicated booth within the BIA for further convenience of arriving tourists.
While PickMe already offers welcome and identification board services for airport arrivals, on the PickMe corporate member platform, the CEO says plans are underway to extend this service to all users in the near future.
Business
Why Sri Lanka’s new environmental penalties could redraw the Economics of Growth
For decades, environmental crime in Sri Lanka has been cheap.
Polluters paid fines that barely registered on balance sheets, violations dragged through courts and the real costs — poisoned waterways, degraded land, public health damage — were quietly transferred to the public. That arithmetic, long tolerated, is now being challenged by a proposed overhaul of the country’s environmental penalty regime.
At the centre of this shift is the Central Environmental Authority (CEA), which is seeking to modernise the National Environmental Act, raising penalties, tightening enforcement and reframing environmental compliance as an economic — not merely regulatory — issue.
“Environmental protection can no longer be treated as a peripheral concern. It is directly linked to national productivity, public health expenditure and investor confidence, CEA Director General Kapila Mahesh Rajapaksha told The Island Financial Review. “The revised penalty framework is intended to ensure that the cost of non-compliance is no longer cheaper than compliance itself.”
Under the existing law, many pollution-related offences attract fines so modest that they have functioned less as deterrents than as operating expenses. In economic terms, they created a perverse incentive: pollute first, litigate later, pay little — if at all.
The proposed amendments aim to reverse this logic. Draft provisions increase fines for air, water and noise pollution to levels running into hundreds of thousands — and potentially up to Rs. 1 million — per offence, with additional daily penalties for continuing violations. Some offences are also set to become cognisable, enabling faster enforcement action.
“This is about correcting a market failure, Rajapaksha said. “When environmental damage is not properly priced, the economy absorbs hidden losses — through healthcare costs, disaster mitigation, water treatment and loss of livelihoods.”
Those losses are not theoretical. Pollution-linked illnesses increase public healthcare spending. Industrial contamination damages agricultural output. Environmental degradation weakens tourism and raises disaster-response costs — all while eroding Sri Lanka’s natural capital.
Economists increasingly argue that weak environmental enforcement has acted as an implicit subsidy to polluting industries, distorting competition and discouraging investment in cleaner technologies.
The new penalty regime, by contrast, signals a shift towards cost internalisation — forcing businesses to account for environmental risk as part of their operating model.
The reforms arrive at a time when global capital is becoming more selective. Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) benchmarks are now embedded in lending, insurance and trade access. Countries perceived as weak on enforcement face higher financing costs and shrinking market access.
“A transparent and credible environmental regulatory system actually reduces investment risk, Rajapaksha noted. “Serious investors want predictability — not regulatory arbitrage that collapses under public pressure or litigation.”
For Sri Lanka, the implications are significant. Stronger enforcement could help align the country with international supply-chain standards, particularly in manufacturing, agribusiness and tourism — sectors where environmental compliance increasingly determines competitiveness.
Business groups are expected to raise concerns about compliance costs, particularly for small and medium-scale enterprises. The CEA insists the objective is not to shut down industry but to shift behaviour.
“This is not an anti-growth agenda, Rajapaksha said. “It is about ensuring growth does not cannibalise the very resources it depends on.”
In the longer term, stricter penalties may stimulate demand for environmental services — monitoring, waste management, clean technology, compliance auditing — creating new economic activity and skilled employment.
Yet legislation alone will not suffice. Sri Lanka’s environmental laws have historically suffered from weak enforcement, delayed prosecutions and institutional bottlenecks. Without consistent application, higher penalties risk remaining symbolic.
The CEA says reforms will be accompanied by improved monitoring, digitalised approval systems and closer coordination with enforcement agencies.
By Ifham Nizam
Business
Milinda Moragoda meets with Gautam Adani
Milinda Moragoda, Founder of the Pathfinder Foundation, who was in New Delhi to participate at the 4th India-Japan Forum, met with Gautam Adani, Chairman of Adani Group.
Adani Group recently announced that they will invest US$75 billion in the energy transition over the next 5 years. They will also be investing $5 billion in Google’s AI data center in India.Milinda Moragoda,
Milinda Moragoda, was invited by India’s Ministry of External Affairs and the Ananta Centre to participate in the 4th India–Japan Forum, held recently in New Delhi. In his presentation, he proposed that India consider taking the lead in a post-disaster reconstruction and recovery initiative for Sri Lanka, with Japan serving as a strategic partner in this effort. The forum itself covered a broad range of issues related to India–Japan cooperation, including economic security, semiconductors, trade, nuclear power, digitalization, strategic minerals, and investment.
The India-Japan Forum provides a platform for Indian and Japanese leaders to shape the future of bilateral and strategic partnerships through deliberation and collaboration. The forum is convened by the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, and the Anantha Centre.
Business
HNB Assurance welcomes 2026 with strong momentum towards 10 in 5
HNB Assurance enters 2026 with renewed purpose and clear ambition as it moves into a defining phase of its 10 in 5 strategic journey. With the final leg toward achieving a 10% life insurance market share by 2026 now in focus, the company is gearing up for a year of transformation, innovation, and accelerated growth.
Closing 2025 on a strong note, HNB Assurance delivered outstanding results, continuously achieving growth above the industry average while strengthening its people, partnerships and brand. Industry awards, other achievements, and continued customer trust reflect the company’s strong performance and ongoing commitment to providing meaningful protection solutions for all Sri Lankans.
Commenting on the year ahead, Lasitha Wimalarathne, Executive Director / Chief Executive Officer of HNB Assurance, stated, “Guided by our 2026 theme, ‘Reimagine. Reinvent. Redefine.’, we are setting our sights beyond convention. Our aim is to reimagine what is possible for the life insurance industry, for our customers, and for the communities we serve, while laying a strong foundation for the next 25 years as a trusted life insurance partner in Sri Lanka. This year, we also celebrate 25 years of HNB Assurance, a milestone that is special in itself and a testament to the trust and support of our customers, partners and people. For us, success is not defined solely by financial performance. It is measured by the trust we earn, the promises we honor, the lives we protect, and the positive impact we create for all our stakeholders. Our ambition is clear, to be a top-tier life insurance company that sets benchmarks in customer experience, professionalism and people development.”
For HNB Assurance looking back at a year of progress and recognition, the collective efforts of the team have created a strong momentum for the year ahead.
“The progress we have made gives us strong confidence as we enter the final phase of our 10 in 5 journey. Being recognized as the Best Life Insurance Company at the Global Brand Awards 2025, receiving the National-level Silver Award for Local Market Reach and the Insurance Sector Gold Award at the National Business Excellence Awards, and being named Best Life Bancassurance Provider in Sri Lanka for the fifth consecutive year by the Global Banking and Finance Review, UK, reflect the consistency of our performance, the strength of our strategy, along with the passion, and commitment of our people.”
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