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Arj Samarakoon Urges Sri Lanka to Follow Australia’s Lead in Climate-Driven Economic Recovery

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Climate shocks are increasingly influencing Sri Lanka’s economic recovery, with floods and extreme weather events posing risks that extend well beyond immediate damage. Key concerns are emerging around tourism continuity, investor confidence, and recovery timelines as climate disruptions become more frequent.

Investor and fund manager Arj Samarakoon emphasized that climate events should now be viewed as economic stress events rather than isolated natural disasters. He noted that the long-term economic impact of these shocks depends less on exposure and more on institutional preparedness and response capabilities.

The recent floods in Sri Lanka have underscored the importance of recovery credibility. While emergency relief remains essential, the longer-term effects are determined by the speed of infrastructure restoration, employment stabilization, and the maintenance of confidence among investors and businesses.

Samarakoon referenced Australia’s experience as a relevant comparison. Despite facing frequent cyclones, bushfires, floods, and extreme heat events, Australia has managed to maintain economic and tourism stability. This stability, he pointed out, is largely due to preparedness, early response systems, and clearly defined recovery frameworks.

Australia approaches climate volatility as a structural reality rather than an exception. Disaster response mechanisms, early warning systems, infrastructure standards, and recovery funding arrangements are embedded into governance well before crises occur. As a result, businesses and investors operate with clearer expectations when disruptions take place. Research by the OECD and World Bank suggests that such predictability mitigates prolonged economic fallout by reducing uncertainty, capital withdrawal, and employment disruption.

Conversely, many emerging economies suffer disproportionate losses because recovery pathways remain unclear. Delays in infrastructure restoration, fragmented public communication, and weak coordination often erode confidence more rapidly than the physical damage itself. The World Bank has repeatedly pointed out that institutional weakness can amplify the economic impact of climate shocks, particularly in tourism-dependent economies.

The implications for Sri Lanka’s tourism-led recovery are significant. Eco-tourism is frequently promoted as a long-term growth opportunity, supported by the country’s biodiversity and community-based tourism potential. However, Samarakoon cautioned that eco-tourism cannot deliver resilience if climate preparedness is treated merely as branding rather than policy.

“Tourism economies remain stable through climate shocks when recovery is planned, not improvised,” he stated.

As climate events continue to challenge Sri Lanka’s economic foundations, analysts argue that lessons from countries like Australia highlight the need to integrate climate resilience into economic planning rather than treating it as a peripheral concern. International assessments by organizations, including the IPCC and the UN World Tourism Organization, have similarly emphasized the growing link between climate preparedness and long-term tourism stability.


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