Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Tea factory owners to get relief package

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„One-year loan moratorium approved by Cabinet

„Rs.500mn allocation to facilitate working subsidised working capital loans

Cabinet approval has been secured to grant one-year moratorium on loans taken by the country’s crisis-hit tea factory owners and to allocate Rs.500 million to facilitate working capital loans at concession­ary rates.

“The relevant Cabinet paper presented by Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasi­nghe was approved by the Cabinet of Ministers recently. The Cabinet clearly ordered the Central Bank to take measures to grant one-year moratorium on loans obtained by the privately-held tea factories,” Plantation Industries

Minister Navin Dissanayak­e said.

The Cabinet also ordered the Central Bank to take measures to halt legal action including seizing of assets by the banking sector,” he added.

Sri Lanka’s tea factories are under continued pressure to cease operations with 62 factories out of 707 already being forced to shut down since 2018 by the declining tea prices and stagnant green leaf production, which is further exacerbate­d by financial mismanagem­ent.

Dissanayak­e said the government has allocated Rs.500 million to Sri Lanka Tea Board (SLTB) to extend working capital loan facilities at a concession­ary rate to tea factories through the banking sector.

“SLTB Chairman Lucille Wijewarden­a will discuss with the Central Bank and will set up a special working capital loans facility for tea factories,” he said.

The working capital scheme is likely to come into force within a month, according to SLTB.

Sri Lanka Tea Factory Owners Associatio­n (SLTFOA) said their members are struggling to service Rs.5 billion worth of outstandin­g loans.

SLTFOA stated that the lower auction prices and static green leaf production levels as key reasons for the current crisis in the industry.

Also, the tea factory owners had borrowed billions of rupees when the lending interest rates were at singledigi­ts which have now climbed up to double digits.

Further, the broker advances to tea factory owners have also been risen rapidly in recent times.

SLTFOA Former Chairman Harith Ranasinghe recently highlighte­d that advances extended by tea brokers have led to “uncontroll­ed borrowing practices” and malpractic­es by certain tea factory owners have led to the financial deteriorat­ion of the sector.

“Some factory owners have got used to these uncontroll­ed borrowing practices. It is like an addiction very difficult to escape. We urge the brokers to bring some control to their financing activities. Otherwise we will all run a very high risk. The broker must concentrat­e on selling the teas than giving advances to the manufactur­ers,” he said.

Although, tea factory owners claim that loans have been obtained to invest in infrastruc­ture and to enhance standards, the authoritie­s allege that considerab­le portions of these loans were utilised to acquire personal assets to support their lifestyles.

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