Sri Lanka stops fuel supply to non-essential services as crisis worsens

Sri Lanka stops fuel supply to non-essential services as crisis worsens


A closed Ceylon Petroleum Corporation fuel station displays the availability of all fuel types on a board due to fuel shortage, amid the country’s economic crisis, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, June 27, 2022.

Dinuka Liyanawatte | Reuters

Sri Lanka will shut schools and only allow fuel supplies to services deemed essential like health, trains and buses for two weeks starting Tuesday, a minister said, in a desperate attempt to deal with a severe shortage.

Sri Lanka is suffering its worst economic crisis, with foreign exchange reserves at a record low and the island of 22 million struggling to pay for essential imports of food, medicine and, most critically, fuel.

Industries like garments, a big dollar earner in the Indian Ocean nation, are left with fuel for only about a week to 10 days. Current stocks of the country will exhaust in just under a week based on regular demand, Reuters calculations show.

Sri Lanka will issue fuel only to trains and buses, medical services and vehicles that transport food starting Tuesday until July 10, Bandula Gunewardena, the spokesman for the government cabinet, told reporters.

Schools in urban areas will be shut and everyone is urged to work from home, he said. Inter-provincial bus service will be limited.

“Sri Lanka has never faced such a severe economic crisis in its history,” Gunewardena said.

Autorickshaw driver W.D. Shelton, 67, said he had waited in line for four days for fuel.

“I haven’t slept or eaten properly during this time,” he said. “We can’t earn, we can’t feed our families.”

A Sri Lanka Air Force member checks the tokens of people queueing for fuel due to fuel shortage, amid the country’s economic crisis, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, June 27, 2022. 

Dinuka Liyanawatte | Reuters

People try to flee

The government is talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on a possible bailout, but many people can’t wait that long and demand for passports has surged.

The navy in the early hours of Monday arrested 54 people off the eastern coast as they tried to leave by boat, a spokesman said, on top of 35 “boat people” held last week.

Embattled President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s elder brother resigned as prime minister last month after clashes between pro- and anti-government protesters spiraled into countrywide violence that left nine dead and about 300 people injured.

An escalation of the fuel shortage could lead to a fresh wave of demonstrations.

Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa called for the government to step down.

“The country has collapsed completely due to the fuel shortage,” he said in a video statement. “The government has lied to the people repeatedly and has no plan on how to move forward.”

Power cuts

The government fuel stockpile stands at about 9,000 tons of diesel and 6,000 tons of petrol, the power minister said on Sunday, but no fresh shipments are due.

Lanka IOC, the local unit of Indian Oil Corporation, told Reuters it had 22,000 tons of diesel and 7,500 tons of petrol, and was expecting another 30,000 tons shipment of petrol and diesel combined around July 13.

Sri Lanka consumes about 5,000 tons of diesel and 3,000 tons of petrol a day just to meet its transport requirements, Lanka IOC chief Manoj Gupta told Reuters.

People wait in a queue after receiving tokens to buy petrol due to fuel shortage, amid the country’s economic crisis, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, June 27, 2022. 

Dinuka Liyanawatte | Reuters

Other big consumers are industries like apparel and textiles companies, whose exports jumped 30% to $482.7 million in May, according to data released on Monday.

“We have enough fuel for the next seven to 10 days, so we are managing,” said Yohan Lawrence, secretary general of the Sri Lanka Joint Apparel Associations Forum.

“We are watching and waiting to see if fresh fuel stocks arrive and what will happen in the coming days.”

Sri Lanka’s power regulator said the country was using its last stocks of furnace oil to run multiple thermal power plants and keep power cuts to a minimum. Scheduled power cuts will rise to three hours from Monday from two and a half hours earlier.

“We are hoping to keep power cuts at three to four hours for the next two months,” said Janaka Ratnayake, chairman of the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka. “But given the situation of the country this could change.”

An IMF team is visiting Sri Lanka for talks on a $3 billion bailout package. The country is hoping to reach a staff-level agreement before the visit ends on Thursday, that is unlikely to unlock any immediate funds.

It has received about $4 billion in financial assistance from India and the Sri Lankan government said on Monday the United States had agreed to provide technical assistance for its fiscal management.



Source

Luma AI raises 0 million in funding round led by Saudi AI firm Humain
World

Luma AI raises $900 million in funding round led by Saudi AI firm Humain

Thomas Fuller | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images Video generation startup Luma AI said it raised $900 million in a new funding round led by Humain, an artificial intelligence company owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. The financing, which included participation from Advanced Micro Devices’ venture arm and existing investors Andreessen Horowitz, […]

Read More
Alphabet stock surges on Gemini 3 AI model optimism
World

Alphabet stock surges on Gemini 3 AI model optimism

  VCG | Visual China Group | Getty Images Alphabet stock jumped 5% on Wednesday after Google debuted its latest artificial intelligence model, Gemini 3, sparking optimism from investors. The new model is an improvement on its predecessor, Gemini 2.5, which Google released about eight months ago. Google said Gemini 3 allows users to get […]

Read More
Blue Owl calls off merger of its two private-credit funds after announcement rattles stock
World

Blue Owl calls off merger of its two private-credit funds after announcement rattles stock

Blue Owl has decided to call off the merging of two of its private-credit funds after the deal caused some angst among investors, according to people familiar with the matter. The firm had planned to merge its smaller, non-traded Blue Owl Capital Corporation II (OBDC II), into the larger, publicly traded fund Blue Owl Capital […]

Read More