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[🇧🇩] Energy Security of Bangladesh
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Summer power supply looks bleak
Emran Hossain 30 December, 2024, 00:51

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The country’s power supply outlook for the next summer remains bleak with energy experts suggesting that optimum use of coal power capacity should be the core of the power generation plan to tackle the situation.

They, however, pointed out many obstacles to achieving the target.

The biggest obstacle is the existing row over unpaid bills with the 1,496MW Adani power plant, the largest coal power plant that has reduced supply to about 400MW at certain hours in a day amidst speculations of diverting power supply to India, they said.

The installed coal power generation capacity is 5,683MW, representing 20 per cent of the overall installed power generation capacity of 27,840MW.

Authorities predicted the peak summer power demand to reach 17,500MW in 2025 with the energy experts estimating that the summer power demand would never fall below 14,000MW.

‘Gas could have been the better option, but directing more gas to power generation implies reducing its supply to industries,’ Bangladesh Working Group on Ecology and Development member secretary Hasan Mehedi told New Age on Sunday.

The generation cost of a unit of electricity from gas was Tk 6.31 in 2023-34, the second lowest power generation cost after hydro-power.

The low-cost power generation from gas is unsustainable because of depleting local gas reserves, which accounted for three-fourths of the gas used for power production in 2023-24.

Producing electricity from imported liquefied natural gas is far too expensive. In 2022-23, Petrobangla bought a unit of gas from state-owned oil companies for Tk 1.5 while the cost of buying local gas extracted by international companies stood at Tk 4.5. The import cost of a unit of LNG was Tk 62.

Bangladesh’s current gas demand is about 4,000mmcfd. The maximum supply, however, remains about 2,800mmcfd. With its current gas handling capacity, the supply could be increased by maximum 200mmcfd.

‘We will try to generate as much electricity as possible from gas next summer,’ said Khandaker Mokammel Hossain, in charge of power generation at the Bangladesh Power Development Board.

The board has asked for 1,200mmcfd gas supply for power generation in the summer.

On December 29, the gas supply to power plants stood at 877mmcfd. In the past summer, the maximum gas supply to the power plants was 950mmcfd.

For an increase of 100mmcfd of gas, power generation increases by 500MW.

An acute gas crisis is currently plaguing households and industries, affecting lives and business. In some areas, the gas supply dropped to near zero recently.

Bangladesh’s current installed gas-based power generation capacity is 11,997MW, 43 per cent of the overall installed power generation capacity.

In 2023-24, less than 45 per cent of the gas-based power generation capacity was used. The gas capacity use is believed to drop in 2024-25.

‘A plan for a combined use of gas and coal is needed to tackle the power demand in summer,’ said Shafiqul Alam, lead energy analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, Bangladesh.

The plan must ensure a regular and timely release of funds for energy purchases, after carefully analysing the market prices to ensure the use of cheaper fuel, he said.

Without the Adani power plant, coal power generation capacity drops to about 4,100MW.

In 2023-24, Bangladesh used less than 36 per cent of its coal capacity, excluding the Adani power plant, which ran at 62 per cent capacity.

Bangladesh has seven coal power plants. A unit of power produced from the Adani power plant cost Tk 14.87 while the average cost of producing power from other coal power plants was Tk 12.74.

A major challenge in ensuring coal supply is that most coal power plants are run by importing the fuel on an ad-hoc basis.

The 1,320MW Payra power plant has a long-term coal supply agreement with a Chinese company. Such agreements are, however, absent in case of the 1,320MW Rampal and 1,224MW SS power plants.

The coal price on the international market is currently rather low. The price might increase any moment as happened over past several years, creating a surge in demand leading to a supply crisis.

‘A situation could develop when you have money but you fail to find a coal supplier,’ warned Hasan Mehedi.

The BPDB said that they were trying to clear bills to coal power plants ahead of the summer.

Energy experts saw no escape from using furnace oil-based power plants on a large scale in the next summer. They saw the prospect of using furnace oil to generate 2,500MW during daytime with the likelihood of the generation reaching 4,000MW in evening peak hours.

In 2023-24, the cost of generating a unit of power from furnace oil-based power plants was Tk 25.70.

‘The best option is to use all coal-based power plants, trying to maintain a base-load of at least 13,000MW,’ said energy expert Mohammad Tamim.

For four hours on sunny days, the energy expert said, solar power could supply up to 700MW.

If 10,000MW could be generated using gas and coal out of their combined generation capacity of 17,680MW, energy experts estimated, a minimum supply of 13,000MW could be possible with the rest of the supply coming from furnace oil and solar energy.

Finding solutions to all these crises depends on finding enough money to purchase fuels, the experts said.

Bangladesh’s current foreign currency reserve stands at about $20b. After falling for about three years, the reserve remained static over the past several months.

People suffered frequent power cuts even in November. The power cuts were reminiscent of long hours of power outage in the past summer, especially in villages, where the poor remained without power for 10 hours or more. The highest power supply in the past summer was 16,477MW.

Summer power cuts could bear serious consequences for it could affect the cultivation of boro, the country’s main staple crop.

‘We must admit power cuts will not go away. But we are trying to keep it at a tolerable level,’ said Mokammel Hossain.​
 

Gas supply to be low in Bangladesh for 72 hours from Wednesday
Staff Correspondent 31 December, 2024, 15:57

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Representational image | File photo

The state-owned oil company Petrobangla on Tuesday warned that the gas supply across the country will drop with consumers experiencing low pressure in the piped gas supply due to three days of maintenance work in one of the country’s two ‘floating storage and regasification units’ starting at 9:00am today.

The impending drop in the gas supply on the first day of New Year frustrated household customers and industrialists as well. Some areas in and adjacent to the capital recently complained about gas supply falling to near zero, even with liquefied natural gas supply to Bangladesh’s optimum capacity.

The floating storage and regasification unit going for maintenance is owned by the Excelerate Energy Bangladesh Limited, which was the country’s first-ever such unit to start supplying imported liquefied natural gas on August 19, 2018.

LNG supply might drop to between 570mmcfd and 580mmcfd, said a Petrobangla press release, potentially resulting in 150mmcfd to 180mmcfd less gas supply to the power sector.

In other sector, the gas supply will drop between 50mmcfd and 70mmcfd, the press release said, regretting potential inconvenience caused.

On Tuesday, the last day of 2024, Petrobangla supplied 831.4mmcfd of LNG to the national grid. The overall supply was 2,764.1mmcfd. The power sector received 848.9mmcfd.

For a 100mmcfd drop in gas supply electricity production may reduce by 500MW. The current power demand of the country is about 10,000MW and there is officially no load shedding at the moment.

Petrobangla officials said that the maintenance work was not scheduled with the company informing about the maintenance work all of a sudden on Monday afternoon.

The other unit, the Summit LNG Terminal, remained offline in six of the first nine months of this year, according to a report of the US-based Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

The Summit-owned floating storage and regasification unit was on routine maintenance in Singapore between January 22 and March 31. It shut down again on May 24 after the cyclone Remal hit. The unit could not be reconnected for a reason or the other until on September 11, prompting the government to cancel four LNG shipments. LNG deliveries to the terminal resumed on September 19.

LNG imports through the first floating storage and regasification unit at Moheshkhali were disrupted for months during the monsoon in 2018.

In 2021, the Summit LNG terminal was out of service for three months due to a damaged mooring line, resulting in gas shortages for power plants, industries and households.

In May 2023, Cyclone Mocha shut down both the units, followed by maintenance work for the Moheshkhali terminal from November 2023 to January 2024.

Both the LNG import terminals have a contract to receive $500,000 every day as regasification charge, not subject to the actual amount of gas handled.​
 

BD to rely heavily on LNG this yr
M Azizur Rahman
Published :
Jan 02, 2025 00:07
Updated :
Jan 02, 2025 00:07

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Bangladesh will have to depend more on volatile spot market this year to import costly liquefied natural gas (LNG) to feed mounting demands from industries, power plants and other gas-guzzling consumers as domestic natural gas output is on the wane, market insiders said.

The country, for the first time, has planned to source a major portion of LNG from spot market compared to long-term LNG suppliers this year resulting in an increasing pressure on foreign currency reserves, they said, adding that the country's spot LNG imports are set to double this year compared to 2024.

A senior Petrobangla official said state-run Petrobangla has planned to import a total of 115 LNG cargoes -- 59 from spot market and 56 from long-term suppliers, which marks a 33.72 per cent increase compared to that of the previous year.

Last year, the country imported a total of 86 LNG cargoes -- 56 from long-term suppliers and 30 from spot market, the official added.

Bangladesh imported half of the last year's total spot LNG cargoes or 15 in the past three months - October, November and December. The increase followed the resumption of operations of Summit LNG Terminal after a seven-month shutdown caused by overhauling, technical glitches and damage from cyclone Remal, he said.

Summit's floating storage and re-gasification unit (FSRU) was offline from January to mid-April due to maintenance and technical issues. After resuming operations, Summit's FSRU re-gasified LNG for around one and a half months until late May before it was struck by a floating pontoon during the cyclone. The FSRU resumed operations in mid-September after recovering from the damage, the official elaborated.

Despite the cessation of operations during the initial weeks in 2024, US's Excelerate Energy's FSRU - Excellence - resumed operations following the overhauling and 20 per cent expanded re-gasification capacity to 4.50 million tonne per year from mid-January, he added.

Bangladesh imported only 15 LNG cargoes in between June to September in 2024 while it had imported 23 spot LNG cargoes in 2023.

The country has been importing the same number of LNG cargoes -56 - from its two existing long-term LNG suppliers-Qatargas and OQ Trading International-over the past three years when the LNG demand across the world grew after initiation of Russia-Ukraine war, said a senior official of state-owned Rupantarita Prakritik Gas Company Ltd (RPGCL).

The RPGCL, a wholly owned subsidiary of Petrobangla, deals with LNG imports from global suppliers.

Both suppliers, however, had supplied a total of 64 LNG cargoes before the Russia-Ukraine war in 2021.

The volume of LNG supply from the two long-term suppliers is around the minimum volume they are bound to deliver under their sales and purchase agreements, or SPAs, with Petrobangla, said the RPGCL official.

Of the total long-term LNG cargoes for 2025 -- Qatargas will supply 40 LNG cargoes and OQ Trading will supply 16 LNG cargoes. The regular size of an LNG cargo is 138,000 cubic metres.

Considering the current market price, Bangladesh has to pay US$45-50 million to import one spot LNG cargo from international market.

According to the Petrobangla estimation, natural gas demand from power plants will be 1,980 million cubic feet per day (mmcfd) in 2025, 1,000 mmcfd for industries, 350 mmcfd for fertiliser factories while there will also be a hike in demand from other sectors.

Like in the previous several years, the country will have to ration gas supplies to consumers to cope with the short supply of natural gas.

The country's natural gas output from local gas fields has been on the decrease and over the past one year the output declined by around 117 mmcfd to around 1,933 mmcfd on December 31, 2024 from 2,050 mmcfd as of December 31, 2023.

Country's overall natural gas output is currently hovering around 2,737 mmcfd, of which around 802 mmcfd is re-gasified LNG, according to official Petrobangla's data as of January 1, 2025.​
 

Disclose AL govt’s power, energy deals
BNP urges interim govt

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The BNP yesterday demanded public disclosure of all the power and energy sector agreements made by the ousted Awami League government.

"The interim government's first job should have been to make public the agreements so that the people can know how the Awami League gave contracts with public money without any tendering process or without following the public procurement rules," said Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku, a standing committee member of BNP.

The AL government realised that money could be made quickly from the sector without any accountability as electricity is invisible, he said at a press conference at the BNP chairperson's Gulshan office.

"They played a magic show in this sector and mobilised money by pickpocketing the people and siphoning the money abroad," said Tuku, who served as the state minister for power during the BNP-led government in 2001-06.

It seems that the power and energy sector was the most corrupt during the 16 years of AL rule, said BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir in his opening remarks.

If the BNP wins the election, the party will review all the issues in the power and energy sector. "We will do what is necessary after reviewing," he said.

The AL spent about Tk 3.33 lakh crore in the power sector in the 16 years and looted more than Tk 1 lakh crore from the amount in the name of capacity charges, which the government has to pay whether the plant produces electricity or not, according to the BNP.

"By whom, and how were the capacity charges fixed in the deals? We want to know how the capacity of a machine [power plants] was calculated and what is the efficiency of the machine. Most of the machines that are receiving capacity charges by sitting idle are defective. They looted public money by installing defective machines and left," Tuku said.

The previous BNP government had the plan to generate at least 60 percent of power by the public sector, he said.

The AL government moved away from the plan by depending on the private sector to generate nearly 80 percent of the power.

"They kept idle the government-owned power plants and installed private sector plants which took high-capacity charges for years."

The quick rental power plants are usually installed to address emergency power shortages.

These plants were supposed to operate for two years but have been running for 15 years or more, and they have cashed their 75 percent investment without producing any power, Tuku said.

He named the five highest recipients of capacity charges: Summit Group (Tk 10,630 crore), Aggreko International (Tk 7,932 crore), Ultra Power Holdings (Tk 7,523 crore), United Group (Tk 6,575 crore) and RPCL (Tk 5,117 crore).

Besides, Bangladesh paid Tk 1,115 crore to India as capacity charges in the name of power import.

"The Awami League government's developments in this sector are not sustainable. The economy can collapse in the future due to their misconduct."

Tuku also raised questions about the corruption in the purchase of pre-paid meters, alleged involvement of Hasina's family in the Rooppur nuclear power plant and allegations of corruption by former state minister Nasrul Hamid in the purchase of liquified natural gas.

"Most of the companies that supplied LNG were owned by Nasrul Hamid and they looted millions."​
 

Gas supply likely to improve this evening in Dhaka city, elsewhere
UNB
Published :
Jan 04, 2025 15:58
Updated :
Jan 04, 2025 17:21

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Gas supply is expected to improve from Saturday evening in Dhaka city and elsewhere as a floating LNG Terminal resumed operation from 7 am on Saturday after three days of suspension.

"We hope, gas supply situation will improve by this evening", Eng Md Rafiqul Islam, Director (Operation & Mines) told UNB.

He said the resumption of supply from the LNG terminal will increase gas supply by 210 million cubic feet per day (mmcfd).

He said the country's two LNG terminals will together supply 780 mmcfd against their capacity of 1100 mmcfd.

"It means there is still a shortage of 320 mmcfd," he said adding that the nagging gas crisis will not be fully resolved soon.

A top official of Petrobangla said that the two LNG terminals need at least 10 cargoes for the month of January but so far 7 cargoes are confirmed for supply.

The consumers in Dhaka city and elsewhere have been experiencing acute gas crisis for last several months.

But situation severely deteriorated from Wednesday last when one LNG Terminal, operated by Excelerate Energy, went on repair and maintenance work.

Petrobangla in a press release had said that countrywide low pressure would prevail in gas supply for 72 hours (3 days) from January 1 to January 4 due to the suspension of operation of an LNG station, known as floating storage and re-gasification unit (FSRU).

Currently, the country has two FSRUs which supply about 1000-1100 million cubic feet of gas per day (MMCFD) of the total gas production of 2900 MMCFD.

Meanwhile, consumers in many areas in the city alleged that they are not getting gas to cook.

Abdur Rahman, a resident of Rayerbazar area, said," We suffer all the year round due to short supply of gas but the situation turned worse in the last three days. Now we have to buy food as we have no gas to cook."

Aysha Chowdhury, a resident of Malinagh area and Jahanara of Shantinagar area also expressed anger for the suffering they have been enduring for the last of days for poor supply of gas.​
 

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