Hon. Minister of Power and Energy Eng. Patali Champika Ranawaka MP, our Chief Guest this evening, Hon. Minister of Internal Transport Ranjith Madduma Bandara MP, our Guest of Honour, Prof. Ananda Jayawardane Vice Chancellor University of Moratuwa, distinguished invitees, Panel members, members of EESOC, Ladies and gentlemen, I am very pleased to stand before you and deliver this key note speech, knowing very well that I am not the best person to do so in the midst of a very distinguished and a highly knowledgeable audience and a panel. In 1979 when I joined CEB I was attached to Kelanitissa Power station and the Pettah power station was looked after by our staff.
There were several outgoing feeders from this power station allocated for the tram lines and trolley bus service as the Pettah Power station was primarily put up in 1902 for the Colombo Electric Tramways and Lighting Company. So here we are re opening the topic of electrification of our transport system once again more than half a century after the electrified transport system that we had Colombo operated by the Colombo Municipality was scraped. It defies me to find the reasons for these decisions as I was told by none other than Mr. H S Subasinghe former General Manager of CEB and the first Chairman of LECO, they had to canvass the tea factories during the same period to electrify their own factories scrapping the large number of mini hydro power stations that were powering them. So it is not uncommon for Sri Lankans to do one thing in one hand and undo it at the same time from the other.
In 1983, I was involved in doing some work in the energy sector and I had to analyse the CEB load profile and the demand projections. To my surprise there was an electricity demand component for railway electrification, 32 years later we are still talking about railway electrification. Railway electrification was first proposed by none other than one of our great visionary engineer D J Wimalasurendra somewhere in the early 1920s.
When I was small we had green coloured electric trolley buses silently moving in Pettah and Fort with their characteristic horn. My grand mother used to talk about the tram cars. The rail lines laid in the middle of the roads in Colombo were still visible until recently. These tram cars were taken off the roads I believe in 1959 or so and the trolley buses too were taken off in 1964. I believe the decision to scrap them were made due to mismanagement, unionism and politics at that time and may not necessarily be for economic reasons.
In 1992, we in Sri Lanka Energy Managers Association organized a roundtable on transportation, I organized this event with the experts at that time, late John Diandas, Dr. Jayawardane (?), Prof KKYW Perera and few others including DIG (Traffic ) Mr. Perimpanayagam as main contributors. It was a very successful one at that time and some SLEMA members made even slide presentations that led to immediate leveling of some road humps that were put up near the pedestrian crossings of the universities, when everyone realized university students were not Montessori students!! Then few bus bays were also constructed on Galle road, though at that time late Mr. John Diandas was against this concept where he argued the busses should stop on the main road while private vehicles should veer away from the main line traffic giving priority to buses. I don’t think this will ever happen though it has a very rational base, perhaps until all of us travel in buses. Once again last year too SLEMA had its annual sessions dedicated for sustainable transportation.
Then in 2008 the Institution of Engineers Sri Lanka sponsored a study of railway electrification and we even got the assistance from the Institution of Engineers India to send an expert in railway electrification and I am sure Tilak who was involved in the study will dwell on. The study had very clear conclusions and a cabinet paper was drafted by the Ministry of Power and Energy and our minister at that time none other than our chief Guest signed it and sent it to the Ministry of Transport which I believe is still there to be signed by the Minister! This cabinet paper never saw the light of the day.
These are some of the attempts made by the professionals of this country to address the efficiency improvements in the transport sector. I must admit unlike in other sectors nothing much has happened in the electrification of the transport sector though it seems to be the obvious solution to many problems in this sector. I am sure those who are involved in this sector know only too well why nothing rational can be done. I do not want to go into details as they are bound to come up in the later discussion session.
So it is very opportune to talk about this topic today and I congratulate EESOC for taking the initiative.
Coming to the topic of the day, it is timely and opportune to take up this matter as a priority due to more than one reason.
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