The Japan Times - Bankrupt Sri Lanka seeks discounted Russian oil

EUR -
AED 3.794909
AFN 76.458476
ALL 99.034315
AMD 409.939796
ANG 1.863431
AOA 943.848309
ARS 1087.486247
AUD 1.647883
AWG 1.862375
AZN 1.760572
BAM 1.947727
BBD 2.087345
BDT 126.081923
BGN 1.956195
BHD 0.389175
BIF 3019.578176
BMD 1.033218
BND 1.396365
BOB 7.144526
BRL 5.999795
BSD 1.03389
BTN 90.442943
BWP 14.301515
BYN 3.383693
BYR 20251.063216
BZD 2.076822
CAD 1.477346
CDF 2949.836368
CHF 0.939932
CLF 0.025939
CLP 995.381495
CNY 7.529887
CNH 7.546363
COP 4256.54618
CRC 526.997843
CUC 1.033218
CUP 27.380264
CVE 110.606342
CZK 25.131677
DJF 184.120618
DKK 7.463912
DOP 64.214874
DZD 139.651787
EGP 51.929289
ERN 15.498263
ETB 130.444116
FJD 2.390146
FKP 0.850945
GBP 0.833213
GEL 2.872748
GGP 0.850945
GHS 15.963614
GIP 0.850945
GMD 74.392028
GNF 8942.497925
GTQ 7.994593
GYD 216.744294
HKD 8.049379
HNL 26.512763
HRK 7.624678
HTG 135.237503
HUF 405.372959
IDR 16888.198522
ILS 3.684561
IMP 0.850945
INR 90.705391
IQD 1353.514939
IRR 43498.457578
ISK 146.696621
JEP 0.850945
JMD 163.36734
JOD 0.732969
JPY 156.439861
KES 133.285421
KGS 90.355268
KHR 4150.435104
KMF 492.332064
KPW 929.895875
KRW 1507.764378
KWD 0.31882
KYD 0.861616
KZT 527.231967
LAK 22446.650788
LBP 92524.628473
LKR 307.346109
LRD 203.828025
LSL 19.021928
LTL 3.050823
LVL 0.624983
LYD 5.073491
MAD 10.344614
MDL 19.386366
MGA 4861.288748
MKD 61.570904
MMK 3355.850172
MNT 3510.873213
MOP 8.295137
MRU 41.380753
MUR 48.255123
MVR 15.922273
MWK 1793.665955
MXN 21.244657
MYR 4.588006
MZN 66.033321
NAD 19.021924
NGN 1548.493805
NIO 37.981465
NOK 11.616909
NPR 144.708709
NZD 1.825747
OMR 0.397482
PAB 1.03388
PEN 3.841543
PGK 4.155641
PHP 59.988996
PKR 288.374831
PLN 4.196982
PYG 8154.923157
QAR 3.761687
RON 4.972053
RSD 117.12971
RUB 100.139075
RWF 1442.371645
SAR 3.875253
SBD 8.727396
SCR 14.782243
SDG 620.964075
SEK 11.310946
SGD 1.398361
SHP 0.850945
SLE 23.495749
SLL 21666.054515
SOS 588.335098
SRD 36.27114
STD 21385.51642
SVC 9.047107
SYP 13433.894063
SZL 19.021916
THB 35.016123
TJS 11.316313
TMT 3.626593
TND 3.308402
TOP 2.419903
TRY 37.165702
TTD 7.014688
TWD 33.933863
TZS 2653.09803
UAH 42.852632
UGX 3796.712157
USD 1.033218
UYU 44.972076
UZS 13405.997551
VES 62.432687
VND 26150.735204
VUV 122.665658
WST 2.893863
XAF 653.255703
XAG 0.032472
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.792322
XDR 0.792994
XOF 650.414138
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.323196
ZAR 19.03103
ZMK 9300.201166
ZMW 28.925669
ZWL 332.695617
  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.36

    -1.94%

  • NGG

    -0.1300

    61.54

    -0.21%

  • BCC

    -1.8300

    123.28

    -1.48%

  • RIO

    -0.2400

    61.95

    -0.39%

  • AZN

    -0.3700

    71.99

    -0.51%

  • GSK

    -0.3400

    36.04

    -0.94%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.81

    -0.16%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.75

    -0.34%

  • RBGPF

    0.5100

    66.51

    +0.77%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.37

    -0.3%

  • BCE

    -1.3800

    22.14

    -6.23%

  • BTI

    0.1400

    41.76

    +0.34%

  • BP

    0.3100

    32.27

    +0.96%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    7.45

    -1.07%

  • VOD

    0.1300

    8.57

    +1.52%

  • RELX

    -0.4100

    49.99

    -0.82%

Bankrupt Sri Lanka seeks discounted Russian oil
Bankrupt Sri Lanka seeks discounted Russian oil / Photo: ISHARA S. KODIKARA - AFP

Bankrupt Sri Lanka seeks discounted Russian oil

Cash-strapped Sri Lanka on Sunday announced sending ministers to Russia and Qatar to try and secure cheap oil a day after the government said it had all but run out of fuel.

Text size:

The government meanwhile extended a two-week closure of non-essential state institutions until further notice in order to save fuel, maintaining only a skeleton staff to provide minimum services.

Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera said two ministers will travel to Russia on Monday to discuss getting more oil following last month's purchase of 90,000 tonnes of Siberian crude.

That shipment was arranged through Coral Energy, a Dubai-based intermediary, but politicians have been urging the authorities to negotiate directly with President Vladimir Putin's government.

"Two ministers are going to Russia and I will go to Qatar tomorrow to see if we can arrange concessionary terms," Wijesekera told reporters in Colombo.

Wijesekera had announced on Saturday that Sri Lanka was virtually out of petrol and diesel after several scheduled shipments were delayed indefinitely due to "banking" reasons.

Fuel reserves were sufficient to meet less than two days' demand and it was being reserved for essential services, Wijesekera said while apologising for the situation.

The state-run Ceylon Petroleum Corporation on Sunday hiked the price for diesel by 15 percent to 460 rupees ($1.27) a litre and petrol by 22 percent to 550 rupees.

Since the beginning of the year, diesel prices have gone up nearly four-fold and gasoline has almost tripled.

Wijesekera said there would be an indefinite delay in getting new shipments of oil and urged motorists not to queue up until he introduces a token system to a limited number of vehicles daily.

- US takes stock-

A delegation from the US Treasury and the State Department meanwhile arrived to "explore the most effective ways for the US to support Sri Lankans in need", the US embassy in Colombo said.

"As Sri Lankans endure some of the greatest economic challenges in their history, our efforts to support economic growth and strengthen democratic institutions have never been more critical," US ambassador Julie Chung said in a statement.

US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Treasury for Asia Robert Kaproth and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Kelly Keiderling were in the delegation.

The embassy said it had committed $158.75 million in new financing in the past two weeks to help Sri Lankans.

About 1.7 million residents need "life-saving assistance", according to the United Nations which issued a flash appeal last week.

Four out of five people in the nation of 22 million have reduced their food intake due to severe shortages and galloping prices, the UN noted.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe warned parliament on Wednesday that more hardships were on the way.

"Our economy has faced a complete collapse," Wickremesinghe said. "We are now facing a far more serious situation beyond the mere shortages of fuel, gas, electricity and food."

Unable to repay its $51 billion foreign debt, the government declared it was defaulting in April and is negotiating with the International Monetary Fund for a possible bailout.

Sri Lanka's official inflation at the end of May was 45.3 percent, according to official data, but private economists have placed it at 128 percent, the second-highest in the world after Zimbabwe.

S.Ogawa--JT