Eastern Eye (UK)

Tourism potential powers Sri Lanka electricit­y vows

GOOD WINTER SEASON EXPECTED, SAYS MINISTER

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SRI LANKA said last Thursday (1) it was reorganisi­ng its blackout-prone electricit­y grid to guarantee power to tourist resorts, in an effort to lure back foreign travellers after a bruising economic crisis.

Months of food, petrol and pharmaceut­ical shortages brought widespread misery to the island nation this year, along with power cuts that reached 13 hours a day at their worst.

The financial shock sparked months of angry protests, culminatin­g in July when a crowd stormed the compound of then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa and forced him to flee the country.

But the crisis has since eased and the government that took charge after his departure is eager to jumpstart the tourism industry, a crucial source of revenue for the country.

“We will have a good winter season,” tourism minister Harin Fernando told reporters in Colombo. “The situation has improved and it is safe for holiday-makers.”

The energy ministry announced that designated tourist areas would be exempt from national blackouts that are still in force for 2.5 hours each night.

Those areas include Sri Lanka’s southern coastal beaches and the hill region around Ella, home to nature reserves famed for their elephant herds.

Sri Lanka has been unable to meet its energy demand after struggling to pay for imported fuel for power plants.

But the ministry said recent rains had filled dam reservoirs for hydroelect­ricity and eased pressure on the grid.

Sri Lanka’s worst economic crisis since independen­ce from Britain in 1948 began when the country ran out of foreign exchange it needed to pay for vital imports.

The Covid pandemic dealt a hammer blow to tourism and foreign remittance­s from Sri Lankans working abroad, both crucial sources of income.

Rajapaksa’s government was also blamed for worsening the crisis through excessive spending and mismanagem­ent.

Sri Lanka defaulted on its $46 billion (£37.89bn) foreign debt in April.

His successor has hiked taxes and tried to bring prices under control, with inflation easing to 61 per cent in November from an eye-watering 69.8 per cent peak two months earlier.

Sri Lanka is now in talks with internatio­nal creditors to restructur­e its borrowings and secure an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund bailout.

The tourism industry has bounced back strongly despite the downturn and political unrest.

Nearly 570,000 foreign travellers visited Sri Lanka in the first 10 months of the year, up from about 200,000 the year before.

Sri Lanka would likely end this calendar year with 750,000 tourist arrivals and about $2bn (£1.64bn) in earnings, Fernando said, adding his ministry would be targeting high end tourists and introducin­g new products in 2023. (AFP, Reuters)

 ?? ?? VISITOR ATTRACTION: Tourists take photograph­s in front of Sri Lanka’s Chinese-built Lotus Tower in Colombo after it was opened to the public in September
VISITOR ATTRACTION: Tourists take photograph­s in front of Sri Lanka’s Chinese-built Lotus Tower in Colombo after it was opened to the public in September

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