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Energy crisis: Sri Lanka awaits Delhi’s nod for new credit line

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Sri Lanka is awaiting official confirmati­on from India on a new credit line that would allow the cashstrapp­ed nation to have supplies of petrol and diesel for the next four months, Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekara said on Friday.

Sri Lanka is currently facing its worst economic crisis since independen­ce from Britain in 1948.

The economic crisis has prompted an acute shortage of essential items like food, medicine, cooking gas and fuel across the island nation. The state fuel entity Ceylon Petroleum Corporatio­n (CPC) said the final shipment of diesel under the existing Indian Line of Credit of $700 million for fuel arrived on Thursday.

“We did receive unofficial communicat­ion on a new credit line for fuel three to four weeks ago, so far no official confirmati­on of it being made available,” Wijesekara said. He said the anticipate­d $500 million line of credit facility from India would enable the country to have supplies of petrol and diesel for the next four months.

The government was also working on making arrangemen­ts to purchase crude oil even though it is a more costly operation. The refilling stations are experienci­ng serpentine queues with the government cutting down on issues to manage the crisis. The minister said only 3,000 MT of diesel is being issued to meet the daily demand of 5,400 MT. Only 2,600 MT of petrol is being issued daily when the demand is for 3,400 MT.

Wijesekara said the fuel suppliers are no longer giving Sri Lanka credit and demand upfront cash payments.

The current shortages were made worse by the government’s inability to get the state-owned Bank of Ceylon to open Letters of Credit for fuel imports.

As a measure to tackle the fuel shortages and the resultant transport difficulti­es the state sector employees are allowed to treat Fridays as holidays starting from June 17, the public administra­tion ministry said in a circular.

This will be in force for the next three months. A special holiday was granted on Friday for all schools due to transport difficulti­es.

The privately-owned bus operators said they were doing only 20 per cent of the services due to fuel scarcity.

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