Sriilanka Foreign Investment Policy: The US State Department said that Sri Lanka’s foreign investment policy is not stable and equal. It is surrounded by unnecessary rules and poor reactions to bureaucracy. It is also legally uncertain.
Keeping this, the US mentioned the Adani Group’s hand out of the $ 40 million renewable energy project in Sri Lanka.
Its 2025 Investment Climate Statements said the US State Department said that Sri Lanka is indicating the 2022 economic crisis and in 2024 the country’s GDP also reached 5 percent, which is more than expected, but the investment environment still remains challenging.
Worry about this matter
This situation remains despite the improvement in political stability after the 2024 election victory of President Anura Kumara Disanayake and his National People’s Power (NPP) alliance. Although NPP’s support for the country’s 3 billion US dollar IMF program has assured some investors, it historically remains concerned about Marxist and Anti-Western stance.
What was Adani’s project?
In February this year, the Adani Group pulled its hands in Sri Lanka from $ 442 million (about Rs 3800 crore) i.e. about 36 billion rupees wind power project. According to AFP documents, Adani decided to withdraw from the project after the Sri Lankan officials tried to change the agreement.
Let us know that Adani Green Energy had been interacting with the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) and other government departments to create two 484 MW (MW) Renewable Energy Wind Forms in Sri Lankan Mannar and Puneryan for the last nearly two years, but the project had to be canceled due to lack of consent. The Adani Group had written in a letter to Sri Lanka’s Investment Board (BOI) that there is no such thing as a rift with the government, just a few things could not be agreed.
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