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Sri Lanka increases household electricity tariffs by 15% - power regulator

Sri Lanka's power regulator announced on Wednesday that the country will raise its household electricity tariffs by 15 percent. This is a major step for the island nation in its efforts to secure its next payment of $2.9 billion from the International Monetary Fund.

K.P.L. reports that the power price for industries will increase by 20,5%, while the electricity prices of businesses in the tourism industry, which is a major foreign exchange earner, will rise by 20,2%. Chandralal is the chairman of Sri Lanka's Public Utilities Commission.

The new tariffs will be in effect at midnight.

The new government of Sri Lanka, headed by President Anura Dissanayake, reduced electricity prices by 20 percent in January. This raised concerns about cost recovery for the state-owned Ceylon Electricity Board's monopoly on power.

Sri Lanka had to increase its power tariffs to get board approval for the fifth tranche of $344m from the IMF.

Sri Lanka's economy collapsed in 2022 due to a severe currency crisis, but it has recovered faster than expected. It grew by 5% in the last year after a bailout in March 2023 from a global lender. (Reporting and editing by Sudipto Ganuly; Uditha Jayasinghe)

(source: Reuters)