Sri Lanka port switches to pedal power
Cash-strapped Sri Lanka's main seaport unveiled a free bicycle service on Tuesday, allowing workers to navigate the facility without petrol-powered vehicles, as the island nation struggles with unprecedented fuel shortages.
The island nation is experiencing its worst financial meltdown since independence, leaving authorities struggling to pay for adequate supplies of vital imports.
Motorists around the South Asian country are forced to spend hours or even days waiting for rationed fuel at gas stations.
The bicycle initiative was aimed at conserving petrol in the Colombo deep-sea container port, Sri Lanka Ports Authority chairman Prasantha Jayamanna said.
"We have built a cycle track along a disused railway line for those who come to the port to use cycles instead of other vehicles," he told reporters.
The port in Sri Lanka's capital sits on 469 hectares (1,160 acres) of land, with its longest road stretching four kilometres (2.5 miles) through the facility. Shipping lines operating through the port -- located in the Indian Ocean, along the world's busiest east-west maritime trade route -- donated 100 bikes to kick off the initiative, Jayamanna said.
Despite Tuesday's announcement, Jayamanna said the port was "insulated from the economic troubles" plaguing Sri Lanka, and was offering petrol from its own reserves to dock workers who were struggling to source fuel elsewhere.
"We are carrying out our work as usual as we have our buffer stocks of fuel," he added.
Sri Lanka's economic crisis was sparked by a crunch on foreign currency reserves that also left importers unable to source food, fuel and other goods. Rampant inflation, frequent blackouts and long queues for essentials have made life a misery for the island's 22 million people.
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