Sri Lanka should plan to benefit from War
Posted on April 1st, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

⚓ Strategic Opportunity: Sri Lanka as a Neutral Maritime Services Hub

My experience at Colombo Dockyard with Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines shows three critical truths:

  1. War-affected fleets always need repair capacity outside conflict zones
  2. Neutral देशों (like Sri Lanka) become trusted service points
  3. Margins are high when capacity is scarce

 Why This Opportunity Will Re-emerge

If tensions ease or reconstruction begins:

Iran will need:

  • Tanker fleet refurbishment
  • Naval auxiliary vessel repairs
  • Dry docking outside sanction-sensitive zones

But Today’s Reality Is

Unlike my earlier tenure:

1. Sanctions Environment

  • Iran is still under varying levels of international sanctions
  • Companies dealing with them must avoid exposure to:
    • OFAC
    • Secondary sanctions from US/EU

 This is the single biggest constraint today

2. Compliance Requirements

Modern shipyards must ensure:

  • Transparent payment channels
  • Non-sanctioned vessel certification
  • Insurance clearance

 So the strategy must be carefully structured—not politically naive

 Strategic Framework for Sri Lanka

1. Position Colombo as Neutral Repair Hub”

Build on:

  • Port of Colombo and Trincomalee 
  • Existing capability at Colombo Dockyard

Target:

  • Commercial tankers (not military vessels initially)
  • Third-party managed fleets

2. Develop Trincomalee for Heavy Industry

Leverage:

  • Trincomalee Harbour

Potential:

  • VLCC / ULCC repair (large tankers)
  • Floating dry docks
  • Offshore fabrication

 This is where scale can surpass Colombo

3. Ship Recycling (Scrapping Yard) – High Potential

Model to follow:

  • Alang Ship Breaking Yard

Key requirements:

Environmental compliance

Follow:

  • Hong Kong International Convention for the Safe and Environmentally Sound Recycling of Ships

 Waste handling systems

  • Oil sludge
  • asbestos
  • heavy metals

Labour standards

Avoid reputation damage seen in:

  • Bangladesh
  • Pakistan

 If done properly:

  • Sri Lanka can become a premium green recycling hub” (higher margins than low-cost yards)

 Business Model (Your Experience Scaled)

Based on your figure (~$1M per tanker):

Scenario:

  • 10 ships/month = $10M/month
  • $120M/year (repairs alone)

Add:

  • Recycling
  • Fabrication
  • Offshore support

 This becomes a $300–500M maritime cluster

Strategic Advantage Sri Lanka Has

1. Neutral foreign policy

  • Not seen as hostile by Iran, India, or West

2. Geographic position

  • Near major shipping lanes

3. Skilled workforce

  • Proven capability from Dockyard legacy

 Risks We  Must Address

 Sanctions exposure

  • Must use legal structuring
  • Possibly work via:
    • third-country operators
    • non-sanctioned vessels

Political inconsistency

  • Investors fear policy reversals

Port authority bottlenecks

  • As you’ve seen in Trincomalee

Practical Way Forward (Action Plan)

Step 1: Cabinet-Level Policy

  • Declare Neutral Maritime Services Strategy”

Step 2: Create Special Zone (Trincomalee)

  • Separate regulatory framework
  • Fast-track approvals

Step 3: Invite Strategic Partners

  • Japanese (your proven link)
  • Korean shipbuilders
  • Middle Eastern tanker operators

Step 4: Compliance Shield

  • Dedicated legal & sanctions advisory unit

 Final Insight

Your instinct is exactly right:

War does not only create destruction—it creates floating assets that must be repaired somewhere safe

Sri Lanka’s opportunity is not to take sides—but to become:

the workshop of the Indian Ocean

Regards

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

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