Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sigh of relief for commercial sector with electricit­y tariff cut

„ PUCSL approves 26% electricit­y tariff drop for hotels „ Industry to witness 25.3% reduction in electricit­y charges „ Overall reduction in electricit­y tariffs stands at 22.49% „ New rates effective from today

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Sri Lanka’s commercial sector can breathe a sigh of relief as the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL) approved the awaited reduction in electricit­y tariffs. The announceme­nt made yesterday brings the much-needed financial support to industries and hotels.

After having lobbied for lower electricit­y costs, the PUCSL’S decision comes as a welcome change. Under the new tariff structure, hotels will be able to reap the benefit of a 26 percent reduction, while industries will see a 25.3 percent decrease. The overall reduction in electricit­y tariffs stands at 22.49 percent.

The new rates are effective from today, July 16.

The move is a notable shift from the series of tariff hikes imposed, which saw electricit­y costs soar by as much as 400 percent. The hike made it increasing­ly difficult for the industrial and tourism sectors to stay afloat.

The tourism sector, which had managed to be categorise­d under the ‘industry category’ for electricit­y tariffs, after several episodes of tariff increases found itself paying exorbitant rates as it did when under the ‘super-tariff’ scheme.

The private sector has been vocal about the overestima­ted tariff forecasts by the Ceylon Electricit­y Board, which led to unnecessar­ily high retail and industrial tariffs. However,

nd their concerns did not receive much attention until now.

Sri Lanka’s apparel sector, a major contributo­r to the nation’s export revenue, has repeatedly emphasised the need for a rigorous implementa­tion of a least-cost generation plan. This, it argues, is essential for Sri Lanka to stay competitiv­e, with the regions adopting low-cost generation and offering lower tariffs without subsidies.

The sector also urged for power purchase agreements to be based on cutting-edge technology, with price discovery conducted through transparen­t competitiv­e bidding. There is a strong call for policies that support the scaling up of renewable energy, including rooftop solar, in line with the government’s goal of generating 70 percent of the country’s energy from renewable sources by 2030.

With increasing pressure from global brands for the decarbonis­ation of supply chains, Sri Lanka must move swiftly in adopting renewable energy solutions but at competitiv­e prices, it said.

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