Why Sri Lankan Companies Are Rethinking Cloud Adoption
Over the past decade, enterprises in Sri Lanka embraced cloud platforms like Microsoft 365, Amazon AWS, Oracle Cloud, and Google Cloud. The promise was simple: scalability, reduced IT headaches, and global availability. But now, the financial reality is hitting hard — millions of rupees flow out of the country every year in USD renewals, with no asset ownership.
# Kapothi Workflow
Cloud → Hybrid → Rising USD costs → Back to On‑Prem
Reason: Subscription renewals draining millions abroad.
Solution: Local datacenters, private clouds, and owned infrastructure.
Impact: Data sovereignty, compliance, and cost control.
Cloud → Hybrid → Rising USD costs → Back to On‑Prem
Reason: Subscription renewals draining millions abroad.
Solution: Local datacenters, private clouds, and owned infrastructure.
Impact: Data sovereignty, compliance, and cost control.
⚡ Why Companies Are Returning On‑Prem
- USD Billing Pressure: With rupee depreciation, cloud subscriptions feel 2–3× more expensive year after year.
- Data Sovereignty: Banks, telcos, and government agencies prefer keeping sensitive data inside Sri Lanka.
- CapEx vs OpEx: Buying servers once feels cheaper than endless OpEx subscriptions.
- Hybrid Fatigue: Maintaining coexistence between cloud and on‑prem adds complexity without reducing costs.
- Control & Customization: On‑prem IT allows tighter integration with legacy ERP, core banking, and compliance systems.
📊 Cloud vs On‑Prem Economics
| Factor | Cloud Platforms (AWS, Oracle, 365) | On‑Prem |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | High recurring USD fees | One‑time hardware + local licenses |
| Ownership | Subscription only | Assets owned locally |
| Compliance | Data stored abroad | Data stays in Sri Lanka |
| DR/HA | Built‑in globally | Must design local DR/replication |
| Currency Risk | Sensitive to USD/LKR | Localized spend |
In short, Sri Lankan enterprises are realizing that while cloud solved technical pain, it created financial pain. For many, the sustainability question is bigger than convenience — they’d rather invest in local datacenters, backups, and DR sites than keep paying millions abroad every year.