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COLOMBO (News 1st); Sri Lanka has unveiled an ambitious National Export Development Plan for 2026–2030, positioning exports at the heart of the country’s economic recovery and future growth strategy, with a bold target to increase total exports to 36 billion US dollars by the end of the decade.
The plan outlines a comprehensive trade development agenda aimed at expanding and upgrading the country’s export base, while integrating Sri Lankan businesses into regional and global value chains.
Central to the strategy is leveraging the island’s geographic advantage to transform it into a key logistics and services hub connecting Asia, Europe, and Africa.
Exports are expected to become the primary engine of economic growth, as the Government seeks to move away from debt-driven expansion towards sustainable growth financed by non-debt inflows. By 2030, the country aims to raise exports to between 14 and 15 percent of GDP, with merchandise exports projected to reach 28 billion dollars and services exports surpassing 8 billion dollars.
The strategy identifies Sri Lanka’s comparative strengths as a foundation for growth, including its well-developed Colombo Port, already a major transshipment hub, along with a skilled workforce and globally recognised export industries such as apparel, tea, and spices. The logistics sector alone is expected to experience significant expansion, with forecasts indicating annual growth of 15 to 20 percent.
Under the overarching vision of ‘Sri Lanka: a competitive logistics and knowledge‑intensive export hub, serving regional and global markets’, the NEDP sets out six mutually reinforcing strategic objectives that provide a coherent framework for reforms and investments.
-Position Sri Lanka as a regional centre of excellence for logistics and integrated hub operations.
-Establish a predictable trade facilitation regime that reduces costs and clearance times through simplified tariffs, digitalised Customs, and risk-based controls.
-Create an enabling trade finance and investment ecosystem that lowers the cost of capital, reduces business frictions, and expands serviced investment space.
-Build a connected, market-led trade promotion system that catalyses Sri Lankan export growth and diversification in priority markets.
-Strengthen national frameworks for quality, standards, and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) aspects to underpin sustained export competitiveness.
-Build a skilled, innovative, and entrepreneur-friendly economy that can generate higher-value, export-oriented growth.
Despite its potential, the plan acknowledges significant structural challenges within Sri Lanka’s export sector. The country’s export basket remains highly concentrated, with apparel and tea accounting for more than half of merchandise exports, leaving the economy vulnerable to external shocks. Limited diversification, gaps in logistics and quality infrastructure, and restricted access to trade finance, particularly for small and medium enterprises, have also constrained growth.
To address these issues, the strategy prioritises export diversification into new markets, particularly in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, while maintaining strong ties with traditional markets. It also emphasises the need for digital transformation, including the full implementation of a National Single Window system to streamline trade processes and reduce costs.
