[🇧🇩] Energy Security of Bangladesh

[🇧🇩] Energy Security of Bangladesh
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G Bangladesh Defense

Before signing energy pacts, Bangladesh should define its own strategy

Moshahida Sultana Ritu

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FILE VISUAL: ANWAR SOHEL

On May 14 this year, the Energy and Mineral Resources Division signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on strategic energy cooperation with the US Department of Energy. In a press note on its website, the US Department of Energy said, “The agreement builds on President Trump’s commitment to unleashing American energy dominance and strengthening global partnerships through affordable, reliable and secure energy. The MoU is expected to facilitate millions of dollars in energy-related projects and investment opportunities across the energy value chain, including liquefied natural gas (LNG), liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), petroleum products, geothermal energy, and bioenergy.”

The agreement promises affordable and reliable supplies and diversification of energy sources to secure US energy to drive peace and prosperity at home and abroad. As per a The Daily Star report, it also pledges cooperation on capacity-building, knowledge exchange, and research in oil, gas, geothermal and bioenergy. The memorandum points to easier access to LNG, LPG, and other fuel imports from the US at favourable terms.

But this raises two questions: why were these fuels chosen as strategic priorities, and how do they fit in Bangladesh’s own sustainable energy future?

The timing deserves scrutiny. Days before the MoU, the Gas Exporting Countries Forum published an expert commentary warning that the global LNG market had entered a new structural phase. Future supply would not be driven by resource scarcity alone but by rising marginal costs and capital constraints.

While LNG trade is expected to expand, the incremental cost of new supply is rising. Projects that once liquefied gas at under $3 per one million British thermal units (MMBtu) are now seeing rising costs that exceed $4 per MMBtu—an increase of roughly 45-55 percent. The analysis points to rising capital costs, greater technical complexity, environmental pressures, and growing uncertainty in project delivery, higher construction costs, remote and risky field development, and fewer low cost sources as reasons.

In short, new LNG is likely to be much more expensive than many policymakers assume.

That findings should make Bangladesh cautious. Locking into long‑term LNG deals with the US could bind us to costly imports and expose us further to global market shocks. Although not ratified, Bangladesh has already signed a reciprocal trade agreement with the US that requires the former country to buy $15 billion’s worth of LNG over the next 15 years.

Presenting LNG infrastructure as an affordable route to “long‑term energy security” looks increasingly problematic when even suppliers warn that new capacity addition will involve higher prices and higher risks. While existing and under‑construction projects remain moderate cost anchors, proposed projects mark a clear step‑up in capital intensity and technical complexity. Costs now vary widely by region and technology, with the Middle East as the low‑cost anchor, Asia Pacific and Eurasia at the high‑cost frontier, and Africa and North America forming a mixed core.

Beside LNG, the MoU elevates bioenergy and geothermal as strategic fuels. That choice is troubling. Bioenergy, outside of energy recovered from waste, competes directly with forests and food production. It increases pressure on land, can raise food prices, and risks harming rural livelihoods. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization has repeatedly warned that unchecked bioenergy expansion can damage food security and the environment. Bangladesh already faces shrinking arable land from urbanisation, infrastructure needs, river erosion, and salinity intrusion. Pursuing large‑scale bioenergy may risk aggravating food security at a time when agriculture is under stress. Meanwhile, the country’s geology and hydrology make it an unlikely candidate for meaningful geothermal development. Prioritising bioenergy and geothermal over abundant solar and wind potential is, therefore, neither comforting nor sensible.

These strategic choices also raise domestic political questions. Amid public unease over trade deals, the government has been actively courting investors. A Bangladesh delegation recently led a group of some 25 business leaders to the SelectUSA Investment Summit in Washington and, along with US diplomats, they met with senior executives from Chevron and LNG infrastructure firms. One must ask whether this concentrated attention on export suppliers and investors was aimed at cementing foreign commercial footholds rather than protecting national priorities.

The core issue here is sovereignty of strategy. Today’s global gas market outlook suggests that an LNG‑centric path will be expensive and risky. Simultaneously, bioenergy and geothermal can carry social and environmental costs for Bangladesh. Before making major binding commitments, the government must test these options against our national capabilities, interests, and food‑security needs. Where is that independent assessment? Why has parliament not been engaged in a public debate?

It is encouraging that the new energy minister speaks in favour of renewables. If the government genuinely wants to expand renewable use and protect national interests, it should avoid fast‑tracking import deals and infrastructure that may strain future budgets. International cooperation must align with Bangladesh’s own priorities, not primarily with foreign commercial aims. Otherwise, these memorandums may contradict ministerial promises and lock the country into costly, environmentally risky technologies.

For decades, Bangladesh has relied on externally driven plans: foreign contracts, foreign loans, and imported fuel. This has increased import dependency, raised debt, and failed to resolve recurring power and fuel shortages. Crises come one after another because domestic expert coordination and national interest seldom lead policy. If one ministry champions sustainability while another signs contrary agreements, the cycle of dependency will continue. Any pact with foreign powers must conform to a domestically determined energy strategy.

The sequence should be clear: define our national energy strategy first, then negotiate international agreements that support it. That is the hallmark of a truly independent state.

Dr Moshahida Sultana is associate professor in the Department of Accounting and Information Systems at the University of Dhaka.​
 

Impact of Middle East Conflict on FY27
Energy-price shock may hurt GDP growth, disrupt inflation control
Finance officials fear slower industrial and agricultural growth, depletion of forex reserves

Syful Islam

Published :
Jun 11, 2026 08:36
Updated :
Jun 11, 2026 08:36

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A further energy-price shock stemming from the conflicts in the Middle East could undermine Bangladesh's economic outlook in FY27, finance officials fear.

They warn that higher energy costs may slow GDP growth, disrupt the downward trend in inflation, dampen industrial and agricultural expansion, and erode gross international reserves as the government places the budget for the next fiscal year in Parliament today (Thursday).

Officials say there is no sign of an early end to the conflict, raising the possibility that energy prices could rise further as production and transportation remain seriously disrupted.

They predict that in the immediate aftermath of the shock, in FY27, GDP growth could fall to around 4.5 per cent, a sharp decline from the baseline projection of 6.5 per cent.

"While the economy is projected to regain some momentum in the following years, it will fail to close the gap with the original growth path," finance officials apprehend.

The energy price shock could create a lasting "growth deficit", preventing the economy from achieving its full productive capacity over the medium term, they warn.

Officials say that if oil prices rise by a further 30 per cent from current levels in FY27, it would significantly disrupt the downward trajectory of inflation in Bangladesh, pushing the rate from a baseline projection of 7.5 per cent to 9.1 per cent.

"The projected oil price shock in FY27 is expected to significantly dampen growth rates across both the industrial and agricultural sectors in Bangladesh compared with their baseline trajectories," finance division officials fear.

Industrial growth could drop sharply from a baseline of 7.0 per cent to 4.5 per cent in FY27, while agricultural growth could slow from 4.5 per cent to 3.0 per cent.

The oil price shock in FY27 is also expected to trigger a significant and sustained deterioration in Bangladesh's external sector indicators.

The balance of trade (BoT) deficit is projected to widen, putting additional pressure on the current account balance, which could slip to a deficit of 1.2 per cent of GDP in FY27.

Consequently, higher import costs would significantly erode gross international reserves.

Officials say the increase in global oil prices in FY26 has already raised foreign exchange requirements and resulted in substantially higher-than-budgeted subsidies, creating additional and unforeseen fiscal pressures.

The oil price shock in FY27 could cause a profound and lasting disruption to Bangladesh's medium-term macroeconomic stability, characterised by a shift towards a high-inflation, low-growth environment, officials fear.

The shock is expected to trigger an immediate rise in inflation to 9.1 per cent and a sharp slowdown in GDP growth to 4.5 per cent, driven largely by reduced industrial and agricultural productivity.

Officials say the shock would not merely cause a temporary fluctuation but alter the country's entire macroeconomic trajectory, leaving the economy with persistent inflationary pressures, lower productive capacity and weaker external buffers throughout the forecast period.

They also warn that a sustained revenue shortfall would require significant fiscal adjustments, with both current and capital expenditure coming under pressure.

Current expenditure is expected to remain below the baseline throughout the medium term, although the gap is projected to narrow gradually as the revenue base expands.

The revenue shock is expected to worsen the fiscal balance and accelerate the accumulation of public debt.

The debt-to-GDP ratio could rise to 40.08 per cent by FY27. If the trend persists, public debt sustainability may deteriorate, potentially constraining the government's borrowing capacity and fiscal space.

Private-sector investment could also decline significantly as a result of the shock, officials fear.​
 

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