"The country needs to replace at least part of the imports currently taking place. And it should not take time. That is why we decided to go for an aggressive food production drive."
Up to a billion rupees of imports could be replaced this year itself.
"It’s a relief because we can't reduce oil imports," he said.
Jayasundera said oil imports were a key reason for the rising trade deficit, but there was no choice but to import oil until Sri Lanka started to produce its own, perhaps in 2015.
In Sri Lanka oil imports are frequently blamed for balance of payments troubles, which started with creation of an unstable soft-pegged central bank in 1950, abolishing a hard peg which had kept the exchange rate fixed from 1884.
Jayasundera said Sri Lanka imported about 200 billion rupees or about two billion US dollars of agriculture rela