Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Legal tangle tightens on LNG power plant in Hambantota

- By Bandula Sirimanna

The Sri Lankan Government’s ambitious plans to establish Liquid Natural Gas Power (LNG) plant in collaborat­ion with Chinese companies have to be put on hold till the clearing of a legal issue of a breach of contract with Greenlink Global Consulting Inc. ( Greenlink) on a Hambantota LNG Energy Project (HEP).

The government, particular­ly Ministry of Power and Energy, has been put on legal notice by Greenlink through a Canadian law firm to not consider or entertain any proposal for developmen­t of any power project at Hambantota in breach of rights granted to Greenlink, official sources said.

In 2010 Greenlink introduced a power and energy developer which is a subsidiary of a renowned US blue chip asset management company to Sri Lanka.

In 2012 this energy developer entered into an exclusive MOU with Board of Investment of Sri Lanka ( BOI) for the LNG facility, gas pipe line and 500MW-1000MW power plant project in Hambantota, The project cost was US$1.4 billion.

However in March 2013 the Ceylon Electricit­y Board ( CEB) requested an independen­t study of the use of LNG as a fuel and hence the approval process was delayed, the company said.

Even after granting exclusive rights by the BOI for the developmen­t of the energy project at Hambantota to this developer, another company received cabinet approval for the use of Hambantota land and a Letter of Intent for a developmen­t of a 1000 MW power project without conducting due diligence or a feasibilit­y study.

This circumvent­ion of rights of the developer and Greenlink was brought to the notice of the government in 2015, Greenlink said.

Government officials have recommende­d at that time to initiate a government- to- government deal for the HEP. T h e r e a f t e r G r e e n l i n k approached the Canadian government in February 2016 and facilitate­d the entry of Crown Corporatio­n of the government of Canada to take up the project.

All proposals, studies, reports, presentati­ons and informatio­n provided to the government Greenlink were and remain the exclusive property of the provider and were delivered to the gover nment or any applicable Ministry or agency on a strictly confidenti­al basis not to be released in part or in its entirety to any other person, the company has said through its legal notice sent to Minister Ranjith Siyambalap­itiya.

Accordingl­y, the Greenlink Company says it requires clarificat­ion and confirmati­on that the Ministry has not considered or approved the developmen­t of a power project at Hambantota or any power project using the HEP concept without the prior written authorizat­ion from the company.

Greenlink also demanded confirmati­on of the ministry that no Chinese government owned or controlled corporatio­n has entered into or attempted to enter into any agreement for the developmen­t of a power facility in Sri Lanka in contravent­ion of their contractua­l covenants to the company.

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