Latest News

Sri Lanka begins talks with India and UAE about a new energy hub

Sri Lanka's energy minister announced on Friday that the country will begin work on plans next month to create an energy hub in collaboration with India and United Arab Emirates. The nation is looking to leverage its strategic position to cement a return from the financial crisis.

The three signed the deal during the visit of India's PM Narendra Modi to the island this month. He was the first world leader to visit since Anura Kumara dissanayake became president last September.

Dissanayake was elected with promises of stability, after the worst financial crises in decades three year ago caused runaway inflation and sent the local currency into freefall.

Trincomalee, a harbour city in eastern Sri Lanka, will be the hub for the construction of the multi-product pipeline and bunkering facilities. A refinery could also be built.

The project will also involve the development of an old storage tank farm from World War II, which is partly owned by a Sri Lankan subsidiary Indian Oil.

Udayanga Hemiapala, Energy Ministry Secretary, announced that representatives from the state-run Ceylon Petroleum and Indian Oil, as well as AD Ports, will meet in Sri Lanka at the end of May to begin discussions on a business plan for a hub.

Hemapala said that a joint project monitoring group has been formed to monitor the development of business plans and finalise detailed proposal.

The president's office reported that President Dissanayake and UAE Deputy Premier Sheikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan also discussed energy co-operation in Colombo with each other this week.

Sinopec, the Chinese state-owned energy company, has signed an agreement to build a $3.2billion oil refinery in Hambantota, a port city located on Sri Lanka's south coast. (Reporting and editing by Christopher Cushing; Uditha Jayasinghe)

(source: Reuters)