Sri Lanka Cut to Four-Day Week. The Fuel Crisis Is 6,000km Away.
Sri Lanka cut its work week by 20% because of a war it had no part in. When distant conflicts strangle global chokepoints, proximity stops mattering.

Sri Lanka just cut its work week by 20%. Starting March 16, government offices, schools, and universities close every Wednesday. The reason? A war happening 6,000 kilometres away.
The Strait of Hormuz—a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman—has been effectively closed since mining operations began March 13. Oil prices surged past $100 per barrel. Global supply chains seized. And Sri Lanka, which imports 100% of its crude oil, is running out.
The four-day week is emergency rationing dressed as policy. Officials aren't calling it that, but the math is clear: fewer commutes, less electricity consumption, stretched fuel reserves. Petroleum accounts for 20% of Sri Lanka's import bill. When prices spike and supply vanishes, the choices narrow fast.
Bangladesh made the same call a week earlier. All universities—public and private—closed March 9. Fuel sales were capped. Traffic thinned. The country is trying to outlast a crisis it didn't create and can't control.
This is the distance problem. Sri Lanka had zero involvement in the Iran conflict. It didn't vote for it, contribute to it, or benefit from it. But dependency erases geography. When you import every drop of oil you burn, a chokepoint 6,000km away becomes your problem the moment it closes.
The World Economic Forum framed it bluntly: "When war strikes one of the world's most critical trade nodes, secondary and tertiary effects compound in ways no model fully captures in real time."
Sri Lanka is still recovering from its 2022 economic collapse—fuel shortages, rolling blackouts, mass protests. The country restructured debt, stabilised its currency, and started rebuilding. Then Hormuz closed. Now it's rationing again.
The four-day week isn't temporary. Officials say it'll last as long as the conflict does. That could be weeks. It could be months. Right now, nobody knows when tankers will move through Hormuz again.
Here's what "distant war" means in 2026: A nation 6,000km from a conflict has to cut a day off the work week because of it. Proximity doesn't determine impact—dependency does. And when you're a price taker importing 100% of your energy, you absorb every shock.
Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are the visible examples. But the pattern extends further. Every fuel-dependent nation without domestic production is doing this calculation right now: how long do reserves last, what gets rationed first, which services shut down.
The blast radius of modern conflict isn't measured in kilometres. It's measured in fuel tanks, import dependencies, and the question no one wants to answer: what do you cut when the oil stops coming?
For Sri Lanka, the answer is Wednesday.
Sources & Verification
Based on 5 sources from 3 regions
- The GuardianInternational
- The HinduSouth Asia
- Al JazeeraMiddle East
- EconomyNextSouth Asia
- World Economic ForumInternational
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