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Sri Lanka’s Energy Minister resigns

By Thomson Reuters Apr 17, 2026 | 5:18 AM

By Uditha Jayasinghe

COLOMBO, April 17 (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s Energy Minister Kumara Jayakody and ministry secretary Udayanga Hemapala resigned on Friday following an outcry ​over coal imports for power generation.

Jayakody stepped ‌down to make way for investigations to be carried out into alleged imports of low-quality coal for Sri Lanka’s only coal-fired power plant, according to a statement from the president’s media ‌office.

The ​resignations were handed over to ⁠Sri Lanka President Anura ⁠Kumara Dissanayake on Friday morning.

Jayakody is the first high-profile cabinet minister to resign over corruption allegations and his move comes after he faced a no-confidence ​motion, which was defeated in parliament last week.

Dissanayake has ordered a full-scale investigation into all coal ⁠imports for power generation dating ⁠back to 2009 and earlier acknowledged that ​the low-quality coal supply has impacted the power generation ​of the state-run Lakvijaya Power Plant.

The power plant ‌needs about 2.25 million metric tons of coal annually to supply about 40% of Sri Lanka’s power needs, according to a special audit report released earlier ⁠this month.

Lower power generation pushed Sri Lanka to order 300,000 metric tons of emergency coal last month and utilise more ⁠diesel and ‌furnace oil for thermal power to ⁠bridge the shortfall.

Sri Lanka, which is recovering ​from ‌a severe financial crisis that peaked four ​years ago, ⁠imports all its fuel. Since the start of the Middle East crisis, the island nation rationed fuel and declared every Wednesday a public holiday to manage stocks.

(Reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe, writing by Tanvi Mehta; editing ​by Philippa Fletcher)