Khaleej Times

Work on $3.85b Lanka refinery starts

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hambantota (Sri Lanka) — Sri Lanka began constructi­on Sunday of a nearly $4 billion oil refinery it hopes will revive foreign interest in its shipping facilities after Beijing’s takeover of a nearby port spooked internatio­nal investors.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe said Hambantota, a district in Sri Lanka’s south which lies on one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, would become a global investment hub with the addition of the oil refinery and storage complex.

The $3.85 billion project is the single largest foreign investment in Sri Lanka’s history. It is jointly funded by Oman and Singapore registered Silver Park Internatio­nal, a company owned by an Indian business family.

The oil facility is near the port of Hambantota.

“The interest shown by the Oman government, the interest shown by many other investors from other parts of the world shows that Hambantota will become a truly internatio­nal investment zone,” Wickremesi­nghe said on Sunday.

Wickremesi­nghe also said he hoped to strike a deal within three months with Indian airport authoritie­s to revive a $210 million airport in Hambantota dubbed the “world’s emptiest” internatio­nal terminal for its lack of flights.

The oil storage tanks are expected to be completed within two years while the refinery is due to be up and running by 2023. Once fully operationa­l the refinery — the second in Sri Lanka — is to export nine million tonnes of petroleum products annually. —

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