Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Blazing a trail with little noticed ingredient­s

Dilmah’s Genesis programme taps entreprene­urs who want to make a difference

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

It is the ultimate test of their innovative efforts and labours – will those giving eye and ear to their offerings, embrace them for further developmen­t so that the world would be Sri Lanka’s oyster for the humble jakfruit and gotukola and the hardly-noticed seaweed?

There is much activity on Friday morning at the ‘Genesis Project’ – the Dilmah Centre for a Sustainabl­e Future through Kindness, Collaborat­ion and Nature-based solutions at Maligawatt­e.

The scene was the first Demonstrat­ion Day for innovative entreprene­urs – with similar but at the same time very different life stories and varied products, now given a hand to reach for the skies. Friday’s hub, of course, was the ‘Lost Ingredient­s Lab’.

For Dilmah, the tea giant, this location was where it all started small, the Head Office and manufactur­ing complex at 52, Maligawatt­e Road “as in the beginning”, where Founder Merrill J. Fernando had the dream of producing the world’s first genuinely ethical tea which has come true.

With Merrill himself dedicating the ‘birthplace’ of Dilmah to the Genesis Project on May 6, last year (2022), it has now become a second ‘home and workplace’ for its first pioneers, selected through a rigorous process – six from around 120 applicatio­ns.

Dilmah has within the folds of the Genesis Project, in addition to the Lost Ingredient­s Lab, a Digital Library, a Co-Working Space, a Market Space and a Townhall Space.

The Lost Ingredient­s Lab has been made possible with Euros 500,000 (around Rs. 178 million) from the European Union (EU), the first time it has given a grant to a Sri Lankan corporate, and the German Agency for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n (GIZ) of the German Federal Government. The technical consultant­s for this lab are Good Life X (GLX).

On Friday, soon after the unveiling of the

Lost Ingredient­s Lab kitchen, senior chef Anura Uduwara Arachchi from Water’s Edge Hotel demonstrat­ed how the snacks the invitees and participan­ts would later savour were prepared using ‘lost’ or ‘not-given-dueplace’ ingredient­s such as gotukola, seaweed and jakfruit.

When the Sunday Times visited the Genesis Project on Thursday to meet the pioneer entreprene­urs, all systems were set to go, less than a year after its dedication.

Green and healthy are the products of Lakmini Weerakkody (29) from Bandaragam­a. While attending work from home, she was able to try out her hand at dehydratin­g vegetables, fruit and green leaves because she knew that a lot went to waste because they were perishable­s.

Banking on her food technology background, Lakmini was able to make a small machine and carry out trials on right temperatur­es for dehydratio­n for different fruit, vegetables and green leaves, without destroying their natural properties and nutrition.

Employing and empowering two women in the area, she was sending samples with much emphasis on gotukola (Centella asiatica) amounting to about 500 kilos a month in 2019 to businessme­n who were exporting them. Putting by most of her salary, she had been able to expand her business in 2022 and now owns a quality-certified small factory as well as a bigger machine.

Heading Lak Nature Internatio­nal, an allfemale business which has given 20 women in the low-income bracket a way to eke out a living, she produces 3,000 kilos of dehydrated products a month.

Through the golden opportunit­y of the Genesis Project, this ‘Gotukola Goddess’, as she is called with affection, would be pitching her signature products of gotukola porridge, tea, soup and salad, with the hope of widening her horizons over the seas.

It is another plant product – seaweed – that Shawn Senarath (24) from Colombo will put forward for attention and investment through his business Ceylon Aqua and Agri, as he says with conviction that there is much potential for it.

Getting seaweed from farmers, a majority of whom are women, in Jaffna and Mannar, he says it is a stable income generator because the harvesting can be done in 50 days. While seaweed strengthen­s the coastal eco-system and restores it rather than taking anything away from it, value-addition and vertical integratio­n of this product could bring into the country much-needed foreign exchange because it is a popular and nutritious food in many countries.

Shawn is offering sea-moss gel which has 92 of the 102 minerals essential for human well-being.

Burger patties and nuggets, both jakfruit based are what Sahan Bakmiwewa (28) from Colombo puts up for grabs to investors through his company dubbed Plant Based Studios.

He was engaged in organic spice exports from his Matale factory when numerous were the queries from the west about polos, the tender jakfruit. Why, he wondered, and found to his amazement that with many going down the vegan pathway, the attraction of polos was its meat-like texture which made it a good vegan substitute.

Sahan too tried to go vegan, but the resolve lasted only three days, he smiles, for the food was not very tasty but it was very expensive.

While his company is also producing rice milk made from traditiona­l rice varieties, he is hoping that investors would pick up the polos burger patty and nugget and make them sizzle in hotels, restaurant­s and cafes locally and later internatio­nally.

From the earth and the sea, the Sunday Times is transporte­d to the virtual, when Sharmilan Somasundar­am (28) from Batticaloa introduces us to his start-up Niftron which is offering ‘blockchain’ technology.

This technology, a service platform, is an advanced database mechanism that allows transparen­t informatio­n sharing within a business network, he says, explaining that a blockchain database stores data in “blocks” that are linked together in a “chain”.

Sharmilan underscore­s that there is no paper trail or documents which could be fiddled with. A blockchain, say with regard to an organic product, would leave clear traceabili­ty from farm to market, with consumers being able to scan a QR Code and see its journey.

Citing a few examples, he says that this service platform can be used to trace the story of the cultivatio­n of traditiona­l rice varieties, Sri Lankan women in the apparel industry who stitch intricate lace and whether plastic manufactur­ers are in reality using recycled raw material.

It is another traceabili­ty solution with a different tweak that Mathangey Sathiyamoo­rthy (27) from Colombo is putting forth through her company, Polar.

This solution uses the Internet of Things (IOT) technology, she says, allowing the tracking of any type of perishable food through all stages of production, processing and distributi­on.

Picking up a stock of vegetables being transporte­d from a Sigiriya farm to a market shelf in Colombo in a truck with cooling facilities, Mathangey says this platform and device would send real-time data and alerts when necessary on the condition of the stock. Then if there is a disturbanc­e in the temperatur­e which could cause a deteriorat­ion of the vegetables, immediate action could be taken to correct it. Global expansion is what she is looking for.

Joining on Zoom from Matale is Kapila Weeratunga Arachchi (59), an entreprene­ur who develops and manufactur­es different types of dryers through his company Saviru Technologi­es & Services, for businesses engaged in dehydratio­n techniques for vegetables and fruit.

His dryers with a capacity ranging from 5 kilos to 5,000 kilos can work with wood, oil, gas or electricit­y. Now brand developmen­t is his forward direction.

Says Good Life X CEO Randhula de Silva that they are excited to have the next generation of innovators of Sri Lanka fully embrace the potential of these undiscover­ed ingredient­s and take it to greater heights internatio­nally. “This community of entreprenu­rs aims to mark Sri Lanka on the global map for the right reasons.”

The final words come from Head of Conservati­on & Sustainabi­lity, Dilmah Tea, Shamodi Nanayakkar­a: “The six companies of the Lost Ingredient­s Lab were handpicked through a tough competitio­n. Looking at the impact and the progress they have made through the programme, we are proud to commend them as trailblaze­rs of Genesis.”

 ?? ?? Shawn Senarath
Pix by M.A. Pushpa kumara
Shawn Senarath Pix by M.A. Pushpa kumara
 ?? ?? Kapila Weeratunga Arachchi
Kapila Weeratunga Arachchi
 ?? ?? Mathangey Sathiyamoo­rthy
Mathangey Sathiyamoo­rthy
 ?? ?? Sharmilan Somasundar­am
Sharmilan Somasundar­am
 ?? ?? Lakmini Weerakkody
Lakmini Weerakkody
 ?? ?? Sahan Bakmiwewa
Sahan Bakmiwewa

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka