Key unsolicited Projects Executed in 70/ 90 
Posted on April 3rd, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

Key unsolicited Projects Executed in 70/ 90 

  • Kotmale Dam – fast-tracked with Swedish funding under Gamini Dissanayake
  • Parliament of Sri Lanka dredging – awarded to Boskalis
  • Sea sand dredging project – linked to Dutch funding + loans
  • Canal rehabilitation – feasibility by WS Atkins
  • Project management – Nippon Koei
  • Execution – Keangnam Enterprises

These represent a classic 1970s–1990s model of development:

👉 politically driven

👉 externally financed

👉 consultant-led

👉 quickly executed


 Lessons to Learn

1.  Speed vs. Process

Then:

Projects moved very fast—decisions taken at ministerial level, minimal bureaucracy.

Lesson:

  • Speed is essential for development
  • But lack of structured procurement can lead to:
    • inflated costs
    • poor negotiation outcomes
    • dependency on external parties

Today’s takeaway:

Create a fast-track approval system” WITH safeguards—not without them.

Unsolicited Proposals – Double-Edged Sword

Then:

Foreign companies like Boskalis brought ideas + financing.

Advantages:

  • No need for government to conceive projects
  • Access to technology and funding
  • Quick start

Risks:

  • Supplier-driven (not country-driven)
  • Weak price discovery (no competition)
  • Hidden long-term costs

 Lesson:

Accept unsolicited proposals—but subject them to competitive benchmarking (Swiss Challenge” model).

Foreign Funding Comes with Influence

Examples:

  • Swedish funding for Kotmale Dam
  • Dutch grants + loans for dredging
  • Japanese and Korean firms executing canals

Reality:

Funding often tied to:

  • contractors from donor country
  • technology lock-in
  • political alignment

 Lesson:

Diversify funding sources and negotiate from strength—not urgency.

Strong Political Champions Matter

Figures like Gamini Dissanayake drove projects personally.

Positive:

  • Projects didn’t stall
  • Bureaucracy was bypassed

Negative:

  • Decisions concentrated in individuals
  • Weak institutional continuity

Lesson:

Blend political leadership with institutional frameworks

not personality-driven development.

 Role of Consultants – Value vs Dependency

  • WS Atkins (feasibility) with RDV local company 
  • Nippon Koei (project management)

Observation:

  • High-quality planning and execution
  • But local capacity remained limited

 Lesson:

Every foreign consultancy must include:

  • technology transfer
  • local engineer training
  • knowledge retention

 Financing Structure Matters More Than Speed

Projects were funded by:

  • grants
  • soft loans
  • export credit

But often:

  • repayment terms were not fully scrutinized
  • revenue models were weak

 Lesson:

No project should proceed without a clear repayment + revenue model.

 Missed Opportunity: Build Local Industry

While foreign companies executed:

  • dredging
  • canals
  • infrastructure

Sri Lanka did not build its own large-scale contracting capability.

 Lesson:

Every project should:

  • mandate local contractor participation
  • develop domestic industry (like what South Korea did)

 Strategic Takeaway for Today

If Sri Lanka wants to replicate that clock  work” speed again:

 What to Keep

  • Decisive leadership
  • Willingness to engage foreign partners
  • Bold infrastructure vision

What to Fix

  • Transparent procurement
  • Competitive pricing
  • Strong legal frameworks
  • Local capacity building
  • Debt sustainability

Final Insight

The past model worked because:

  • the country was starting from a low base
  • urgency justified shortcuts

But today:

 The stakes are higher

debt is heavier

geopolitics is sharper

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