Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Completely dependent on electricit­y and connectivi­ty, ICT industry grinding to a halt

Service providers despair as clients go to competitor­s in other countries like India Some companies with internatio­nal clients flying people out to Singapore and Maldives to keep their projects going Company heads face brain drain as more and more dishear

- By Tharushi Weerasingh­e

Irosha de Silva's marketing tech company, Creative Hub, is generally buzzing with 45 people providing end- to- end marketing solutions for countries across the world. Over the last week, however, there’s an air of idleness in office, with highly qualified IT profession­als passing time playing chess and cricket. The reason: power cuts.

Continued, prolonged electricit­y interrupti­ons are bringing the ICT industry to a halt. Many service providers despair that time-sensitive projects from a global clientele were being sabotaged because of continued power supply.

First, they grappled with power outages that were inconsiste­nt with announced schedules. Creative Hub is in Rajagiriya, which was exempted from prolonged outages until last week. Mr de Silva just couldn’t identify his area on the Ceylon Electricit­y Board’s ( CEB) lists to figure out when the interrupti­ons would take place. This made planning impossible.

Local clients were easier to placate. But internatio­nal clients did not tolerate delays. "We're startups and we've worked very hard to build these connection­s overseas and to gain client trust," he said. Their hard work could now amount to nothing.

Desperate, Mr. de Silva made a public appeal on Facebook for space with electricit­y. "My team was even willing to sit on the floor and work so they're very committed," he said. Fortunatel­y, he managed to buy a petrol generator from Kandy to restart operations.

Company heads are being driven to take drastic measures.

"We're flying people out to Singapore and Maldives to keep our projects going," said CEO of WSO2 Sanjiva Weerawaran­a. Substantia­l customer support and sales- related tasks are done locally and are time- sensitive. Some employees are on a 3 a. m. shift since most ICT companies provide service to internatio­nal clients.

"There is no ‘ ideal time’ for a power cut to be imposed," he pointed out. The industry is completely dependent on electricit­y and connectivi­ty.

"This is an internatio­nally portable industry so migration pressure is increasing," Dr Weerawarna, who employs 850, said. Employees are increasing­ly dishearten­ed and "see no future". "Most are applying for visas

and I can’t possibly ask them to stay given how volatile the situation is." There is concern about significan­t brain drain.

Those attached to companies could function as long as generators had die

sel but freelancer­s and others working from home ( WFH) for internatio­nal companies could not afford it.

"I started hiring a hotel room to work from during the first week,” Rukmal Fernando, a WFH ICT industry profession­al. He provides services to a Singapore firm and has two computer monitors on. Depending on laptop battery wasn’t an option. All of his activities, from customer communicat­ions to project running, are internet-dependent and the routers don’t work during power outages. So he bought an inverter for Rs 600,000. This was not affordable for younger people just starting out.

The recurrent power cuts have severely affected customer confidence. "They question how we plan on providing services because we need to be 24/ 7, running without interrupti­on,”

Mr Fernando said. Providing backup power solutions to employees wasn’t practical; neither was it practical to get into office as there was no fuel.

"These inconvenie­nces are sending a lot of our clients to competitor­s in other countries like India,” he warned.

Electricit­y outages extended to a maximum of 13 hours this week. Laptop battery lasts for four hours, at most. Using them to the brink also affects their quality and lifetime. "Nothing in the current context is built to withstand complete blackouts like this," Mr Fernando said.

ICT services are Sri Lanka’s fifth biggest export, earning US$ 1.2bn in 2020, s ays Chair man of the Informatio­n and Communicat­ion

Technology Agency ( ICTA) Oshada Senanayake. The Agency’s goal had been to hit US$ 3bn by 2024. But the compoundin­g issues are alarming.

"These are mission- critical internatio­nal projects and we have IT companies setting up their extended IT teams and outsourcin­g branches of their IT f unctions to Sri Lanka," Mr Senanayake said. The cycle of dysfunctio­n that hampers profession­als-- from lack of fuel to work from offices and lack of power to work from home-- will severely affect competitiv­eness.

"Because this affects our credibilit­y across the world, it isn't just the forex coming in right now that we're worried about,” Mr Senanayake said. “It is our potential for forex expansion."

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Tech companies operating at the ICTA premises

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