Sri Lanka to Enlist Foreign Companies to Ease Fuel Shortages
(Bloomberg) -- Sri Lanka plans to allow foreign companies to distribute fuel in a bid to ease crippling shortages that have paralyzed most economic activity as the island nation grapples with a sovereign debt crisis.
The government is preparing a cabinet paper that would allow for more fuel distributors, and is aiming for four new players -- with foreign companies permitted -- to operate state-run Ceylon Petroleum Corp’s filling stations, Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera said in a press conference. Currently only CPC and Indian Oil Corp Ltd’s Sri Lanka unit are permitted to distribute fuel.
The new distributors will be asked to import oil on credit, Wijesekera said.
The island nation is in talks with the International Monetary Fund as well as bilateral creditors such as India and China for fresh funds to pay for imports after it defaulted on its dollar bonds earlier this year and saw foreign reserves dwindle. Sri Lanka needs $6 billion in the coming months to prop up its reserves, pay for ballooning import bills and stabilize its currency, which has fallen 43% against the dollar this year.
The country’s credit rating downgrade and existing arrears raised risk for suppliers and contributed to the failure to get foreign lenders including Standard Chartered and some Indian banks to confirm the letter of credit from state-run People’s Bank for the last fuel shipment, Wijesekara said.
CPC will also facilitate imports of jet fuel by state-run Sri Lankan Airlines, which is itself up for sale as the government seeks to raise funds. The nation has to reduce monthly fuel consumption to $350 million from $650 million currently, the minister said.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2022 Bloomberg L.P.
KEEPING THE ENERGY INDUSTRY CONNECTED
Subscribe to our newsletter and get the best of Energy Connects directly to your inbox each week.
By subscribing, you agree to the processing of your personal data by dmg events as described in the Privacy Policy.
More oil news

Europe Defense Spending Lifts Stocks, Hurts Bonds: Markets Wrap

Oil Holds Declines on Prospect of Higher Russia, Iraq Supplies

Canada’s Conservative Leader Pitches Major Natural-Resource Revamp to Counter Trump

EPA Terminates Nearly 400 Workers Amid US Government Purge

Trump to Create White House Council to Drive Energy Dominance

Oil Steadies as Trump’s Reciprocal Tariffs Add to Trade Tensions

Isuzu to Build Car Plant in South Carolina as Trump Tariffs Loom

SoftBank Weighs Debt-Heavy Financing in $500 Billion AI Push

Stocks Climb as Traders Brush Aside Tariff Threats: Markets Wrap
