ECONOMYNEXT — Sri Lanka Education Minister Susil Premajayantha will intervene in the ongoing daily power cuts and a proposed electricity tariff hike in consideration of students sitting for their GCE Advanced Level exams from January to February next year, the minister said.
Speaking in parliament on Thursday December 01, Premajayantha said 350,000 students are going to sit for their A/L exams from January 23 to mid February, a month long period in which power cuts would prove disruptive and higher electricity bills would be unaffordable amid a high cost of living.
“I will discuss this at the cabinet meeting and also take it up with the Ministry of Power & Energy and see if they can provide some sort of relief,” he said, responding to a request by Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa who urged the government to reconsider the tariff hike.
“The cabinet has approved the proposed tariff hike. How can the people expect to live? They’re living in unbearable conditions. On the one hand, electricity charges are increased. On the other hand, when global oil prices drop, there is no corresponding reduction in fuel prices here. There should be some humanity to this,” said Premadasa.
Power & Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekara told parliament on Sunday November 27 that Sri Lanka’s state-run Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) will need another tariff hike to cut losses amid high fuel costs. Cabinet approval has been obtained for six monthly price revisions.
A tariff hike granted by the regulator, the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL), in August was not enough to cover costs, and the agency is still making losses.
PUCSL Chairman Janaka Ratnayake said on Wednesday that no tariff hike was being considered at present, adding that the CEB’s high operating costs are partly due to excessive prices paid for fuel.
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Sri Lanka electricity losses from overpriced fuel, no tariff hike considered: regulator
The CEB itself does not buy fuel but depends on state-run Ceylon Petroleum Corporation and Lanka Coal, another state firm to buy fuel. Both firms are periodically caught in procurement scandals. (Colombo/Dec01/2022)