Strategic Lessons from Singapore’s Tuas Megaport for Sri Lanka
Posted on May 20th, 2026

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

The article about Singapore’s Tuas Megaport is a remarkable example of how a small island nation is using maritime infrastructure, automation, and land reclamation to strengthen its position as a global logistics hub. The project revolves around Tuas Port, which is planned to become the world’s largest fully automated container terminal.  

Key highlights include:

  • 448 giant underwater concrete caissons, each weighing about 15,000 tons
  • 681 hectares of reclaimed land created from the sea
  • 66 berths across 26 km of deep-water waterfront
  • Planned annual handling capacity of 65 million TEUs
  • AI-controlled cranes, autonomous vehicles, and private 5G logistics systems
  • Full consolidation of Singapore’s container operations into one mega terminal by the 2040s  

This project demonstrates how Singapore treats maritime logistics not merely as transport infrastructure but as a strategic national survival policy.

For Sri Lanka, especially with opportunities around Port of Colombo, Trincomalee Harbour, and the offshore and marine engineering sector, there are several lessons:

  1. Long-term port vision

    Singapore planned Tuas decades ahead. Sri Lanka often changes policy with governments, delaying strategic maritime development

  • offshore fabrication yards
  • shipbuilding
  • floating dock facilities
  • marine industrial parks
  • renewable ocean-energy zones
  • Port + industry integration

    Singapore connects the port to industrial districts and innovation zones. Sri Lanka still treats ports separately from manufacturing and marine industries

Automation and AI

    Future ports will employ fewer manual workers but more:

robotics technicians

  • marine software engineers
  • logistics analysts
  • autonomous vessel operators

This creates demand for vocational maritime training institutions.

Maritime geopolitical strategy

    Singapore survives because global trade depends on it. Sri Lanka sits beside one of the busiest east-west shipping lanes but has not yet fully leveraged that advantage.

Yet the scale of execution is extraordinary for a country with limited natural land resources.

For Sri Lanka, the strategic takeaway is clear:

A nation located on major shipping routes can become wealthy not only by exporting goods, but by controlling maritime logistics, ship services, offshore engineering, bunkering, marine technology, and transshipment ecosystems.

Constructive Proposal to the Government

Sri Lanka is located beside one of the world’s busiest maritime trade routes, yet we have not fully transformed this geographical advantage into a national economic engine. Singapore, despite having limited land and no natural resources, has built the world’s largest automated megaport through long-term planning, technology, and maritime-focused national policy.

The development of Singapore’s Tuas Megaport offers several important lessons for Sri Lanka.

Key Lessons

  1. Ports must be linked to industry

    A port alone does not create wealth. Singapore integrated ports with logistics, manufacturing, ship repair, marine engineering, bunkering, and technology services.

  1. Long-term planning beyond politics

    Singapore planned its maritime future over decades. Sri Lanka requires a bipartisan national maritime strategy extending beyond election cycles   

Automation and skills development

    Future ports depend on AI, robotics, and smart logistics. Sri Lanka must urgently modernize vocational and technical education in marine and port technology sectors

Marine economy as a national priority

    The ocean should not be viewed only for tourism and fisheries. It is an economic corridor capable of generating exports, employment, and foreign exchange.

Proposal to the Hon. Ministers

We respectfully propose the following national initiatives:

1. Establish a National Maritime and Offshore Development Council

A high-level coordinating body involving:

  • Ports Authority
  • BOI
  • Navy
  • Marine industries
  • Universities and technical institutes
  • Private investors

Develop a Marine Industrial Zone

Possible locations:

  • Trincomalee
  • Hambantota
  • Colombo North Port expansion areas

 Introduce Maritime Technology Training Programs

Partner with local and international institutions to train:

  • crane automation technicians
  • marine welders
  • underwater engineers
  • port AI systems operators
  • offshore safety personnel

Encourage Public–Private Partnerships

Create investment-friendly policies for:

  • floating docks
  • dry docks
  • bunkering
  • marine renewable energy
  • coastal logistics infrastructure

Launch a Blue Economy Sri Lanka 2040” Strategy

Sri Lanka’s location is a gift of geography. If combined with vision, discipline, and technology-driven planning, our island can emerge as a major maritime and logistics hub in the Indian Ocean region.


Dr Sarath Obeysekera

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