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Sri Lankan banking leaders join AIA Bancassurance Summit 2025 in Beijing to shape Asia’s financial future

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Senaka Rajapakse, Director and Chief Partnership Distribution Officer, AIA Sri Lanka, Kelum Edirisinghe, Director and CEO of NDB Bank, Lee Yuan Siong, Group Chief Executive and President, AIA Group, Sanath Manatunge, Managing Director and CEO, Commercial Bank of Ceylon, Chathuri Munaweera, Director and CEO, AIA Sri Lanka and Thimal Perera, Director and CEO, DFCC Bank.

AIA Group recently hosted its annual Bancassurance Summit 2025 in Beijing, bringing together senior executives and strategic banking partners from across the Asia-Pacific region. Held under the theme ‘Ascend Together: Igniting Growth and Innovation,’ the summit served as a platform for collaboration, thought leadership, and the advancement of bancassurance across the region. This year’s event was marked by the strong presence of a distinguished Sri Lankan delegation, underscoring the country’s growing influence and commitment to innovation in the financial services sector.

Representing Sri Lanka were five prominent leaders from the banking and insurance industries: Sanath Manatunge, Managing Director and CEO of Commercial Bank of Ceylon; Thimal Perera, Director and CEO of DFCC Bank; Kelum Edirisinghe, Director and CEO of NDB Bank; Chathuri Munaweera, Director and CEO of AIA Sri Lanka; and Senaka Rajapakse, Director and Chief Partnership Distribution Officer of AIA Sri Lanka. Their participation highlighted Sri Lanka’s strategic role in shaping the future of bancassurance and fostering regional partnerships.

The summit featured a series of high-level discussions on macroeconomic trends, customer-centric strategies, and the transformation of banking models in a digital-first world. A key highlight was the ‘CEO Panel Discussion’ titled ‘How Banks Drive Growth and Innovation’. One of the Sri Lankan delegates, Sanath Manatunge, Managing Director and CEO of Commercial Bank of Ceylon, joined the panel of senior leaders from Bank Central Asia and Bank of East India to share Sri Lankan perspectives. The panel explored how financial institutions can lead transformative change through strategic partnerships, innovation, and technology-driven solutions.

Another notable feature of the summit was the ‘CEO Exclusive Session’, which provided a unique opportunity for senior executives to engage in high-level networking and cultural exchange. Set against the backdrop of Beijing’s vibrant innovation ecosystem, this session facilitated meaningful dialogue among leaders from China, regional banks, and AIA. It reinforced the importance of collaboration and cross-border engagement in navigating the future of financial services.

The AIA Bancassurance Summit 2025 concluded with a renewed commitment to partnership-driven success. The presence of Sri Lanka’s top banking leaders at the summit elevated the country’s profile on the regional stage while contributing valuable insights to the broader conversation on sustainable growth and innovation. Their active engagement reflected a shared vision for customer empowerment, digital transformation, and resilient financial ecosystems across Asia. As the financial landscape continues to evolve, AIA reaffirms its role as a catalyst for innovation and growth, helping stakeholders across the region ascend together toward a more connected and prosperous future.



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‘Sri Lanka’s forests are undervalued economic assets — and markets are paying the price’

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Professor Friedhelm Goeltenboth

Sri Lanka’s economic strategy continues to focus on exports, productivity and fiscal consolidation.

Yet one of the country’s most valuable assets — its forests and traditional forest-based farming systems — remains largely absent from economic planning. This is no longer an environmental oversight. It is a business risk.

At a recent Dilmah Genesis Thought Leadership Series lecture in Colombo, tropical ecology expert Professor Friedhelm Goeltenboth delivered a clear message: once forests are destroyed, the economic value they provide is lost permanently.

What replaces them — monoculture plantations — may appear efficient, but over time they generate declining yields, rising input costs and growing exposure to climate shocks.

From a financial perspective, this is asset depletion, not development.

Monoculture systems simplify production but externalise costs. Soil erosion, fertiliser dependency, water stress and biodiversity loss eventually hit farmers, banks, insurers and the state.

Sri Lanka is already seeing the consequences through falling productivity and rising agricultural vulnerability.

Forest-integrated farming offers a different model — one that treats land as a multi-income asset.

Spices such as cinnamon, pepper, cardamom and nutmeg can be grown under shade alongside fruit, timber and fibre crops, stabilising income while protecting soil and water. For lenders and insurers, diversified systems reduce risk. For exporters, they support traceability, sustainability certification and premium pricing.

The strongest business opportunity lies in carbon markets. Voluntary carbon markets allow companies to offset emissions by funding verified forest conservation and restoration.

Across Southeast Asia, communities now earn income simply by protecting forests that store carbon.

Sri Lanka has the scientific capacity to enter this space. Farmers can collect data; experts can certify it. What is missing is a coordinated national framework that allows communities and corporates to participate efficiently.

Carbon revenue will not replace agriculture, but it can stabilise it — providing income during crop maturation and creating a new form of export: environmental services.

Ignoring this opportunity carries downside risk.

Biodiversity loss, pollinator decline and climate volatility threaten long-term agricultural productivity. Forests are not sentimental assets; they are economic infrastructure.

Sri Lanka’s recovery cannot be built on short-term extraction. If the country wants resilient growth, it must start recognising the real value of what is still standing, he added.

By Ifham Nizam

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Pavan Rathnayake earns plaudits of batting coach

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Sri Lanka batting coach Vikram Rathour has hailed middle-order batter Pavan Rathnayake as one of the finest players of spin in the modern game, saying the youngster’s nimble footwork and velvet touch were a “breath of fresh air” for a side long troubled by the turning ball.

Drafted in for the second T20I after Sri Lanka’s familiar struggles against spin, Rathnayake looked anything but overawed by England’s seasoned tweakers, skipping down the track with sure feet and working the ball into gaps with soft hands.

“He is one of the better players when it comes to using the feet,” Rathour told reporters. “I haven’t seen too many in this generation do it as well as he does. That is really impressive and a good sign for Sri Lankan cricket.”

Sri Lanka went down in a last-over nail-biter but there were silver linings despite the hosts being a bowler short. Eshan Malinga was forced out after dislocating his left shoulder and has been ruled out for at least four weeks, a blow that ends his World Cup hopes. Dilshan Madushanka, Pramod Madushan and Nuwan Thushara have been placed on standby.

Power hitting remains Sri Lanka’s Achilles’ heel and Rathour, who carries an impressive CV from India’s T20 World Cup triumph two years ago, pointed to a few grey areas in the batting blueprint.

“There are two components to T20 batting,” he said. “One is power hitting, but the surfaces here, especially in Colombo, are not that conducive to clearing the ropes. The wickets are slow and the ball doesn’t come on to the bat. The other component, just as important, is range as a batting unit.”

Even when Sri Lanka lifted the T20 World Cup in 2014 they were not blessed with a dressing room full of big hitters, relying instead on sharp running, clever placement and a mastery of spin. Rathour preached a similar mantra.

“If you are not a team that hits a lot of sixes, you can still find plenty of fours by utilising the whole ground,” he said. “Most of them sweep well, reverse sweep and use their feet. That is encouraging. If you don’t have the brute power, you can make up for it by using angles and scoring square of the wicket.

“These wickets perhaps suit that style more. They are not the easiest surfaces to hit sixes, and I’m okay with that. If they can use their feet and the angles well, that is as good.”

Rex Clementine
at Pallekele

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Unlocking Sri Lanka’s dairy potential

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Sri Lanka’s dairy and livestock sector is central to food security, rural livelihoods, and national nutrition, yet continues to face challenges related to productivity, climate vulnerability, market access, and financing.

In this context, Connect to Care and DevPro have entered into a formal partnership through a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to support Sri Lanka’s journey towards dairy self-sufficiency.

A core objective of DevPro is to strengthen inclusive and resilient dairy value chains by empowering smallholder farmers through technical assistance, capacity building, climate-resilient practices, and market-oriented approaches, building on its extensive field presence across Sri Lanka.

A core objective of Connect to Care is to support the achievement of dairy self-sufficiency by 2033, as outlined in the national development manifesto, with an interim target of 75% self-sufficiency by 2029.

By strengthening local dairy production and value chains, this effort will also help reduce Sri Lanka’s dependence on imported dairy products, while improving farmer incomes and domestic supply resilience.

The partnership will focus on climate-smart dairy development, multi-stakeholder coordination, and exploring blended finance and PPP models—providing a structured platform for development partners and the private sector to engage in scalable action.

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