Crisis-hit Sri Lanka prepares for Gulfood 2023 to attract more foreign exchange

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Updated 21 December 2022
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Crisis-hit Sri Lanka prepares for Gulfood 2023 to attract more foreign exchange

  • 28 Sri Lankan companies will participate in Gulfood 2023 in Dubai on Feb. 20-24
  • They will showcase mainly coconut-based products, spices and certified organic food 

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka is preparing to participate in the Gulfood 2023 exhibition in the UAE, the Exports Development Board said on Wednesday, as the crisis-hit country looks to attract additional foreign business.

The event, one of the region’s biggest food and beverage exhibitions, will be held in Dubai Feb. 20-24, featuring thousands of participants from around the world.

The objective of Sri Lanka’s participation is to promote sales of its products in the Middle East, Africa, and South Asia regions, which constitute 40 percent of its export market.

Nearly 90 food and beverage companies applied to represent the country at its expo pavilion, according to Sri Lanka’s Exports Development Board.

“The EDB carefully selected 28 from among them who would be able to capture new trade opportunities in the UAE and also among the countries in the Middle East,” EDB Assistant Director Gayani Wijetilake told Arab News.

The companies will showcase mainly processed and fresh fruits and vegetables, coconut-based products, tea, spices and certified organic food and supplements. 
As countries in the Middle East have been focused on food security, especially since COVID-19 pandemic restrictions upended global supply chains, Sri Lanka wants to tap into the market.

“We can have a networking with them and capture new market opportunities created due to the COVID-19 situation,” Wijetilake said.

“There are big emerging demands for products — natural, healthy products — we have that opportunity to promote our Sri Lankan brands.”

But the main purpose, she added, is to boost the crisis-hit country’s overall exports.
Since early 2022, the island nation of 22 million has been gripped by a deep financial crisis — its first sovereign default since independence — because of record-low foreign exchange reserves.

Officially, Sri Lanka’s reserves stand at $1.7 billion, but this includes $1.4 billion from the People’s Bank of China that cannot be tapped until the country saves up reserves to finance three months of imports.

While Colombo is working to access a $2.9 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund to put its debt repayments back on track and stabilize the economy, it is pinning hope on exports to bring in more dollars.

The markets Sri Lanka will be targeting at the Gulfood exhibition brought $400 million to the country in 2022.

“We are targeting $592 million for 2023,” Wijetilake said.

“We will get more foreign exchange to the country ... for a little bit of relaxation of the current situation we are facing.”
 


EU parliament approves 90-bn-euro loan for Ukraine amid US cuts

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EU parliament approves 90-bn-euro loan for Ukraine amid US cuts

  • awmakers voted by 458 to 140 in favor of the loan, intended to cover two-thirds of Ukraine’s financial needs for 2026 and 2027

The EU parliament on Wednesday approved a 90-billion-euro loan for Ukraine, providing a financial lifeline to cash-strapped Kyiv four years into Russia’s invasion.
Lawmakers voted by 458 to 140 in favor of the loan, intended to cover two-thirds of Ukraine’s financial needs for 2026 and 2027 and backed by the EU’s common budget — after plans to tap frozen Russian central bank assets fell by the wayside.

Military aid to Ukraine hit its lowest level in 2025 as the US pulled funding, leaving Europe almost alone in footing the bill and averting a complete collapse, the Kiel Institute said Wednesday.
Kyiv's allies allocated 36 billion euros ($42.9 billion) in military aid in 2025, down 14 percent from 41.1 billion euros the previous year, according to Kiel, which tracks military, financial and humanitarian assistance pledged and delivered to Ukraine since Russia's full-scale invasion.
Military aid in 2025 was even lower than in 2022, despite the invasion not taking place until February 24 that year.
US aid came to a complete halt with President Donald Trump's return to the White House in early 2025.
Washington provided roughly half of all military assistance between 2022 and 2024.
European countries have thus made a significant effort to plug the gap, increasing their collective allocation by 67 percent in 2025 compared with the 2022-2024 average.
Without that effort, the US cuts could have been even more damaging, the institute argued.
However, the think tank points to "growing disparities" among European contributors, with Northern and Western European countries accounting for around 95 percent of military aid.
The institute calculated that Northern European countries (Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden) provided 33 percent of European military aid in 2025, despite accounting for only eight percent of the combined GDP of European donor countries.
Southern Europe, which accounts for 19 percent of the combined GDP of European donors, contributed just three percent.
To help fill the gap left by the United States, NATO launched the PURL programme, under which European donors purchased US weapons for Ukraine, worth 3.7 billion euros in 2025.
Kiel called the initiative a "notable development", which had enabled the acquisition of Patriot air-defense batteries and HIMARS multiple-launch rocket systems.
European allies are also increasingly placing orders with Ukraine's own defence industry, following a trend started by Denmark in 2024.
War-torn Ukraine's defence production capacity has "grown by a factor of 35" since 2022, according to Kiel, but Kyiv lacks the funds to procure enough weapons to keep its factories working at full capacity.
Orders from 11 European donor countries helped bridge that gap last year.
In the second half of 2025, 22 percent of weapons purchases for Ukraine were procured domestically, a record high.