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facebook.com
“The coal corruption is the biggest in Sri Lanka's history ... - Facebook

5 hours ago ... The government has acted against its mandate by committing this offence. I was surprised to see even Minister Bimal Ratnayake trying to safeguard the company ...

facebook.com
lankaweb.com
LankaWeb - Audit reveals irregularities in coal procurement for ...

Audit reveals irregularities in coal procurement for Lakvijaya Power Plant Posted on April 7th, 2026 Courtesy Adaderana A special audit report has uncovered multiple irregularities in the coal procurement process carried out by the Lanka Coal Company for the Lakvijaya Power Plant for the 2025/2026 season. According to the report issued by the Auditor General, a controversial supplier, Trident Chemphar Ltd, had relied on laboratory reports from a loading port facility whose license had already been revoked. The audit was conducted following a request by the Parliamentary Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE), which had raised concerns regarding procurement procedures and the quality of coal supplied to the Norochcholai Lakvijaya Power Plant. The report further revealed that at the time bids were called, the selected supplier, Trident Company, had not completed its registration. Despite clear tender requirements stating that only fully registered suppliers could submit bids, three unregistered suppliers—including Trident—were allowed to participate in the process. In terms of quality assurance, coal shipments are typically tested at both loading and unloading ports by independent inspectors. However, the audit found that coal sample testing at the loading port had been assigned to an Indonesian laboratory— PT Mitra SK Analisa Testama Samarinda —whose license had been cancelled by December 29, 2025. Moreover, there was no evidence that the company’s license had been renewed even by March 31, 2026. Despite this, all 12 shipments received were certified using reports issued under this questionable arrangement through Mitra SK South Africa. The report also highlighted discrepancies between test reports from the loading port and data recorded at the Lakvijaya Power Plant’s main control unit. Although the Lanka Coal Company had several alternative options to verify these inconsistencies, it had failed to utilize any of them. Additionally, the audit pointed out serious lapses in supply planning. Although coal imports must be maximized during limited unloading periods in Sri Lanka, no shipments were procured during a critical 40-day window from November 13 to December 30, 2025. As a result of insufficient shipments, an emergency procurement was carried out on March 18 this year. However, the selected supplier, Taranjot Resources (Pvt) Ltd., had previously failed—within a 36-month period—to supply coal meeting the required gross calorific value of 5,900 kil...

lankaweb.com
hirunews.lk
CID probe sought into coal imports - Hiru News - Srilanka's Number One ...

The Presidential Secretariat filed a complaint with the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) this morning (11) seeking a formal inquiry into coal imports dating back to 2009.

hirunews.lk
lankaleader.lk
President's secretary files CID complaint to probe coal imports dating ...

The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) has been asked to investigate Sri Lanka's coal import processes dating back to 2009, following a complaint filed by the secretary to the president.

lankaleader.lk