Sri Lanka hit by power cuts after key union goes on strike
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[June 09, 2022]
By Uditha Jayasinghe
COLOMBO (Reuters) -Swathes of Sri Lanka
were hit by electricity cuts on Thursday after a power sector union went
on strike opposing new government regulations, compounding hardships as
the country tackles a crippling economic crisis.
About 900 out of around 1,100 engineers of the state-run Ceylon
Electricity Board (CEB), Sri Lanka's main power company, went on strike
at midnight, stalling operations at eight hydropower plants that
generate around 1,000 MW of electricity.
The CEB Engineers' Union is opposed to government plans to amend
legislation governing the country's power sector, which include removing
restrictions on competitive bidding for renewable power projects.
Kanchana Wijesekera, Sri Lanka's power minister, said he was open to
make changes to the legislation that is due to be presented to
parliament, adding that consumers had the right to cheap and
uninterrupted electricity supply.
"If the existing CEB act does not need amendments and has the capability
to implement renewable energy projects without delay, why did the CEB
deprive many who had requested to do so for years?," Wijesekera said in
a tweet.
Sri Lanka's 22 million people are already suffering the country's most
serious financial turmoil in seven decades, with severe shortages of
fuel, medicines and other essentials amid record inflation and a
devaluation of its currency.
In a bid to stop the CEB Engineers' Union from striking, Sri Lanka's
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa issued a gazette notification late on
Wednesday declaring electricity supply as an essential service.
The legal directive makes it mandatory for engineers to report to work.
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Diesel vehicles queue up in a long line to buy diesel due to a fuel
shortage countrywide, amid the country's economic crisis, in
Colombo, Sri Lanka, June 8, 2022. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte
"President Rajapaksa called the union president late
last night and made an appeal not to let the entire grid collapse.
So we are working to ensure hospitals and other essential services
have power," the union's joint secretary Eranga Kudahewa told
Reuters.
"But the strike will continue," he said.
The government, pushing renewable energy as a potential solution for
the country's power woes, has underlined the need for the amendments
to allow for quicker approval and implementation of projects.
Janaka Ratnayake, chairman of the power regulator Public Utilities
Commission of Sri Lanka, said regions supplied by hydropower had
seen power outages, including parts of the commercial capital
Colombo.
"We are working to restore services and will talk with the unions to
reduce public inconvenience," Ratnayake told Reuters.
Sri Lanka was crippled by long power cuts earlier this year after it
was unable to import fuel needed to generate electricity, though the
situation has improved as monsoon rains have bolstered hydropower
generation.
(Reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe, Writing by Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing
by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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