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Sri Lanka Raises Power Tariffs as Energy Costs Begin to Bite

COLOMBO, March 30 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka raised power tariffs for most households by 7.2% and industries by 8.7% on Monday as the island ​nation grapples with higher energy costs stemming from the Iran ‌war.

The new power prices are linked to a $2.9 billion program with the International Monetary Fund that Sri Lanka signed in 2023 to help recovery from a severe ​financial crisis.

Under the program, Sri Lanka implements cost-reflective energy pricing ​multiple times a year to keep its state-run power monopoly, ⁠the Ceylon Electricity Board, financially stable.

Hotels, linked to Sri Lanka's crucial tourism ​sector, will pay 9.9% more, the country's power regulator said in a ​statement. Poorer households will pay between 4.3% to 6.9% more under the new prices.

"If energy prices increase much more due to the war we will consider a ​fresh request to raise power prices," Prof. K.P.L. Chandralal, chairman of the ​Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka told reporters in Colombo.

The CEB had initially requested ‌for ⁠a price hike of 13.56% to cover a 15.8 billion rupee ($52.6 million) revenue shortfall caused by rising costs. The new tariffs will be implemented from the beginning of April.

Sri Lanka declared every Wednesday a public holiday, ​introduced fuel rationing, ​and raised pump ⁠prices by about 35% earlier this month to manage fuel consumption.

The island is in talks with Russia, India ​and the U.S. to procure uninterrupted supplies of fuel ​and ⁠is spending $600 million to purchase refined fuel for April, State-run Ceylon Petroleum Corporation Chairman Janaka Rajakaruna said over the weekend.

The country is struggling to purchase ⁠90,000 ​metric tons of crude oil needed to ​keep the island's only refinery running and produce enough stocks of furnace oil to run its ​thermal power plants, Rajakaruna said.

Reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe; Editing by Arun Koyyur

Source: Reuters


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