Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka | |
Native Name A: | Sinhala; Sinhalese: ශ්රී ලංකා මහජන උපයෝගිතා කොමිෂන් සභාව Tamil: இலங்கைப் பொதுப் பயன்பாடுகள் ஆணைக்குழு |
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Jurisdiction: | Government of Sri Lanka |
Headquarters: | Floor 6, BOC Merchant Tower, St. Michael’s Road, Colombo 3 |
Budget: | Rs 249.8 million (2017)[1] |
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Chief1 Name: | Janaka Ratnayake |
Chief1 Position: | |
Chief2 Name: | Prof. Janaka Ekanayake, Chathurika Wijesinghe, Udeni Wickramasinghe, Mohan Samaranayake |
Chief2 Position: | |
Chief3 Name: | Damitha Kumarasinghe |
Chief3 Position: | |
Chief4 Name: | Gamini Herath |
Chief4 Position: | |
Chief5 Name: | Nadheeja warapitiya |
Chief5 Position: | Secretary |
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Keydocument1: | Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka Act, No. 35 of 2002 |
The Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (abbreviated PUCSL) (Sinhala: ශ්රී ලංකා මහජන උපයෝගිතා කොමිෂන් සභාව Śrī Laṃkā mahajana upayōgithā komishan sabhāwa; Tamil: இலங்கைப் பொதுப் பயன்பாடுகள் ஆணைக்குழ) is the government entity responsible for policy formulation and regulation of the electric power distribution, water supply, petroleum resources, and other public utilities in Sri Lanka.[2]
The PUCSL was established by the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka Act, No. 35 of 2002, and has authority for the execution of its duties through this Act, as well as through those established for organizations, agencies and corporations involved in providing public utilities in the country.[3] It has a broad mandate to act both as a consumer protection authority, as well as an advisory, inspection and policy formulation body; as such, it is also involved in issuing and enforcing licences that regulate utilities on the island, enforcing contracts between utilities providers and the State, regulating utilities tariffs, resolving disputes (both between utilities providers and the State, and between them and the public), and the establishment and enforcing safety and quality standards within the utilities sector (including standardization of the country's power plugs and sockets).[3] [4] The Commission seeks to promote competition and efficiency among utilities providers, and harmonise the country's utilities sector with international standards.[3]
The commission has recently been assigned the task of producing Sri Lanka's long-term power generation plan in the middle of power shortages and an impending energy crisis in the country- the Electricity Supply 2020 and Beyond report has been the subject of minor controversy, with unionized employees of the Ceylon Electricity Board in particular taking issue with it.[5] [6] [7]
The Director General and Secretary to the Commission both report directly to the commission, with the latter having oversight of the PUCSL's legal affairs department and internal auditor, while the director general has direct oversight of:[8]
The main departments of the commission are controlled through the deputy director general[8] -
The Consumer Consultative Committee (CCC) was established under section 29 of the PUCSL Act, in order to act as a forum for the representation of the general public and small industry within the commission and the broader utilities sector, and thus prevent the government and larger industry from dominating policy and regulation.[9] The CCC consists of 15 volunteer members:[9]
The CCC is responsible for consulting the general public on proposed policy changes, current issues in the utilities sector and any other matters that would affect the public, as well as outreach and education of the public on changes to existing regulatory and procedural practices or policies enacted by the State.[9] It is also acts as a distinct advisory body to the commission by itself.[9]