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Browns becomes world’s biggest tea exporter in deal with LIPTON

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Sri Lanka’s Browns Investments said it had reached an agreement to buy Lipton tea companies in Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda from their UK and Netherlands based parents.

The purchase will be made through UAE-based, B Commodities ME FZE, a unit of Browns Investments.

It had entered into a sales and purchase agreement (SPA) with Ekaterra Holdco UK Limited, and Netherlands based Ekaterra Group Holdings BV and Ekaterra Group Holdings 2 BV, to buy control of the Africa firms, Browns said in a stock exchange filing.

Browns Investments will buy 100 percent of Rwanda-based Lipton Teas and Infusions Rwanda Limited and 100 percent of Tanzania-based Lipton Teas and Infusions Tanzania Limited.

It will buy 98.56 percent of kenya-based Lipton Teas and Infusions Kenya Plc, and 51.99 percent of Limura Tea Plc.

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Eco-Tourism, Climate Shocks, and Economic Resilience Lessons from Australia for Emerging Tourism Economies

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Climate shocks are no longer peripheral risks for tourism economies. They are now central economic variables shaping capital flows, employment stability, insurance markets, and long-term growth prospects. For emerging economies that rely heavily on tourism, climate volatility increasingly determines whether eco-tourism functions as a durable growth strategy or a fragile branding exercise.

Investor and fund manager Arj Samarakoon, widely known as Arj Samarakoon, has repeatedly argued in regional investment discussions that climate resilience should be treated as economic infrastructure rather than an environmental add-on. This distinction is critical for understanding why some tourism economies withstand climate shocks while others struggle to recover.

Australia provides a useful reference point. Despite facing frequent cyclones, floods, bushfires, and prolonged heat events, Australia has maintained long-term confidence in its tourism sector. This outcome is not the result of lower exposure, but of stronger institutional preparation.

Arjuna Samarakoon, widely known as Arj Samarakoon, with his team supporting food and flood relief efforts during climate-related disruptions in Sri Lanka.

Australia’s approach treats climate risk as a structural certainty rather than an exception. Disaster response frameworks, early warning systems, infrastructure standards, and recovery funding are embedded into policy well before crises occur. Tourism operators, insurers, and investors therefore operate within a predictable environment when climate shocks materialise. Research by the OECD shows that such predictability significantly reduces the economic cost of climate events.

For emerging tourism economies, the contrast is stark. Climate shocks often trigger uncertainty that extends well beyond physical damage. Delays in infrastructure restoration, fragmented public communication, and unclear recovery timelines can rapidly erode investor confidence. The World Bank has noted that institutional weakness frequently amplifies the economic impact of climate events in tourism-dependent countries.

Eco-tourism is often presented as a solution to this vulnerability. Nature-based tourism, conservation-led development, and community participation align well with global sustainability preferences. However, eco-tourism remains highly sensitive to climate shocks if resilience is not embedded into governance structures.

Projects marketed as sustainable can fail quickly when floods disrupt access, utilities become unreliable, or insurance coverage tightens. Without institutional resilience, sustainability narratives struggle to translate into stable economic outcomes. This challenge is increasingly recognised in discussions on what Sri Lanka can learn from Australia and the Philippines on economic reform and resilience.

Australia’s experience illustrates that eco-tourism succeeds when resilience is treated as a core economic function. Disaster response systems are designed to preserve continuity, not merely to provide relief. Communication during climate events is coordinated to protect destination confidence rather than amplify uncertainty.

For emerging economies, the lesson is not to replicate Australia’s scale or spending capacity, but to adapt its institutional logic. Climate resilience must be integrated into tourism policy, infrastructure planning, and investment assessment frameworks.

As Arj Samarakoon has noted in investment forums, capital increasingly flows toward destinations that demonstrate governance capacity under stress. In a climate-exposed world, eco-tourism is no longer judged solely by environmental appeal, but by its ability to function through disruption.

Climate shocks will continue to shape tourism economics. Emerging economies that treat resilience as strategy rather than sentiment will be better positioned to convert eco-tourism into a durable source of growth.

  • OECD (2021). Climate adaptation and resilience in tourism economies.
  • World Bank (2020). Climate resilient tourism development.
  • UNWTO (2021). Tourism and climate change: Policy frameworks.

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Dubai Based Sri Lankan Entrepreneur Launches Global Forex Marketplace

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A visionary Sri Lankan entrepreneur based in Dubai has launched VerifiedBrands.io, a cutting-edge Forex Marketplace Ecosystem designed to bring transparency, trust, and regulatory compliance to the Global Forex industry.

The platform addresses one of the most critical challenges in online trading — the difficulty of finding legitimate and regulated brokers and financial service providers. VerifiedBrands.io connects traders, licensed Forex brokers, technology providers, and affiliates in a secure and trusted digital marketplace.

“Our mission is simple — to eliminate fraud and scams from the Forex industry and give traders, investors, and partners a reliable ecosystem where only regulated and verified companies are listed,” said Anthony, the founder of VerifiedBrands.io.

VerifiedBrands.io verifies and lists only Regulated Forex brokers and compliant financial technology providers, offering a single platform for:

Traders seeking trusted brokers and services

Companies looking for high-quality leads and exposure

Technology providers offering white-label solutions, trading infrastructure, CRM systems, Liquidity Solutions, Payment Gateways , API solutions

Affiliates and partners wanting to work with compliant, reputable firms

The platform also provides tools and resources to help traders and partners compare, connect, and collaborate confidently, making it a first-of-its-kind ecosystem for the Forex community.

With the global Forex industry estimated at over $6 trillion in daily trading volume, VerifiedBrands.io aims to build a safer, more transparent trading environment and empower investors and traders worldwide to make informed decisions.

For more information, visit www.VerifiedBrands.io

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LB Finance to enter Philippines market through subsidiary

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LB Finance PLC, a Sri Lankan Non-Bank Financial Institution (NBFI), has received regulatory approval from the Central Bank of Sri Lanka to establish a wholly owned subsidiary in the Philippines.

In a corporate disclosure to the Colombo Stock Exchange, the company said the Director of the Department of Supervision of Non-Bank Financial Institutions granted approval on 11 December to set up the subsidiary under the name LB Finance Philippines Inc.

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