India has
long been concerned about growing Chinese influence in the island nation, which
sits near key global shipping lanes and which India considers to be within its
sphere of influence. Sri Lanka on Friday 1 Mar awarded the construction of
three solar and wind hybrid power generation facilities to an Indian company
after scrapping a tender won by a Chinese firm.
India has long been concerned about
growing Chinese influence in the island nation, which sits near key global
shipping lanes and which India considers to be within its sphere of influence.
The project, initially financed by an
Asian Development Bank (ADB) loan, was temporarily shelved two years ago after
India raised concerns over China's involvement.
Sri
Lanka's energy ministry said Friday that the project had been revived and was
now fully funded by an $11 million Indian government grant. It added that
renewables firm U-Solar from Bengaluru had been awarded the building contract.
India's assistance "underscored
the significance New Delhi attached to bilateral energy partnership", the
Indian embassy said in a statement.
The
three facilities will have a combined 2,230 kilowatts of renewable energy
capacity and be located on islets near the northern city of Jaffna, not far
from India's southern coast.
China
and India have been competing for major infrastructure projects in Sri Lanka,
which is currently emerging from its worst economic crisis since independence
from Britain in 1948.
Beijing
is also Sri Lanka's single largest bilateral creditor, accounting for around 10
percent of the island nation's $46 billion foreign debt at the time of a
government default at the peak of the crisis in 2022.