[🇧🇩] Energy Security of Bangladesh

[🇧🇩] Energy Security of Bangladesh
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G Bangladesh Defense

Rural electricity may face pressure as PDB pushes REB to raise revenue

Mohiuddin
Dhaka
Published: 19 May 2026, 21: 46

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The Bangladesh Rural Electrification Board (REB) supplies electricity to rural people through 80 cooperatives across the country.

For five decades, it has been delivering relatively low-cost electricity to villages. Loss-making cooperatives under REB are kept afloat through the income of a few profitable ones.However, to reduce its own financial deficit, the Bangladesh Power Development Board (PDB) is now exerting pressure on REB.

In a new proposal submitted to the Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (BERC), PDB has said it wants to increase the bulk power tariff rates for REB’s profitable cooperatives.

However, REB officials said that in the last fiscal year only 13 cooperatives actually made profits. Another four did not incur losses. The remaining 63 cooperatives are sustained through subsidies from the profitable ones. If PDB’s proposal is implemented, the existing rural electricity supply structure could collapse. They say it would be a self-destructive decision by the government.

BERC Chairman Jalal Ahmed told Prothom Alo that the stakeholders will be included in the review of PDB’s proposal during the public hearings to be held on 20 and 21 May. The commission will then make a final decision considering consumer interests.

PDB wants profitable cooperatives separated

PDB claims REB receives electricity at a lower price than other distribution entities. Therefore, higher electricity consumption by REB reduces the average bulk price. While the current bulk power tariff per unit is Tk 7.04, PDB is receiving Tk 6.99. Most subsidy costs go toward REB.

According to PDB’s calculation, REB currently buys electricity at Tk 6.24 per unit, while selling it at an average retail price of around Tk 8.50. No other distribution company earns such high per-unit revenue. DESCO buys electricity at a maximum of Tk 8.58 per unit and sells it at Tk 10.40.

The proposal states that 21 REB cooperatives have a customer structure similar to urban distribution companies DESCO and DPDC in Dhaka. In these cooperatives, the average bill per unit is Tk 9.36. In contrast, the remaining 59 cooperatives have an average bill of Tk 7.85. Therefore, if these 21 cooperatives are separated and charged urban-like wholesale prices, PDB’s revenue will increase.

According to PDB officials, retail electricity prices are the same for all consumers, but wholesale prices vary by distribution company. In FY 2024–25, 63 per cent of the organisation’s financial deficit was due to supplying cheaper electricity to REB. This pressure will increase further next year. Reducing subsidy pressure in the power sector is necessary to avoid raising retail tariffs.

Capacity payments and subsidy pressure on PDB

PDB said it pays capacity charges of around USD 12 (Tk 1,476) per unit monthly for liquid fuel and gas-based plants, and up to USD 25 (Tk 3,070) for coal-based plants. In addition, even when large consumers are directly connected from the grid, PDB does not receive demand charges (minimum monthly bill regardless of usage). Distribution companies collect demand charges even without providing direct service, and PDB said this should be paid to it to reduce deficits.

The proposal states that around 2,000 MW of 19 large connections under REB are currently in process. Once these become operational, they will create an additional subsidy burden of Tk 36 billion for PDB.

Such large connections under REB will continue to increase. REB supplies electricity to most economic zones. If these large consumers are supplied through 132 kV instead of 33 kV lines, PDB’s subsidy per unit would decrease by Tk 2.24, because wholesale tariffs from 132 kV are higher than 33 kV.

PDB has cited four large projects to demonstrate potential revenue gains, including the Jalsiri Housing Project.

According to PDB calculations, directly supplying electricity to this 500 MW-demand project would generate Tk 41.82 billion annually. But if supplied through REB, revenue drops to Tk 33.29 billion. Direct supply would also allow PDB to collect Tk 540 million in demand charges. This means PDB is losing about Tk 9.08 billion in potential annual revenue.

Deficit will increase unless electricity prices rise

Following the proposal to increase wholesale electricity prices, REB submitted an application to BERC on 6 May to increase retail power tariff electricity prices.

It states that REB had a deficit of Tk 16.98 billion in 2024–25 fiscal. In the current fiscal year, it may rise to Tk 23.68 billion. Therefore, retail prices need to increase by at least 5.93 per cent. If wholesale price and wheeling charges increase, retail prices will also have to rise proportionally.

REB officials say the organisation was established in 1977 and currently serves about 37 million customers, covering about 77 per cent of the country’s total electricity users. It handles about 57 per cent of national electricity distribution. About 56 per cent of REB’s electricity goes to residential consumers, most of whom are low-income and low-usage customers. Providing cheap electricity to lifeline and first-tier consumers causes losses. REB has not proposed increasing tariffs for these groups. Therefore, even if wholesale costs rise, REB’s revenue will not increase proportionally.

Risk of imbalance in rural electricity system

REB officials and energy experts said that in the power sector, customers effectively provide subsidy outside government support. High-usage consumers pay higher tariffs. In residential use, consumption above 600 units costs Tk 14.61 per unit. This is higher than PDB’s production cost of around Tk 12.50 per unit. This extra revenue subsidises low-use consumers. Similarly, REB’s 21 profitable cooperatives subsidise others. This is known as cross-subsidy and maintains balance.

REB’s financial report shows that in the last fiscal year, Tk 35.15 billion from 13 profitable cooperatives was used to cover losses of 65 cooperatives. In reality, profitable cooperatives sustain the entire rural electricity distribution system. Most profitable cooperatives are located in industrial areas around Dhaka, Gazipur, and Narayanganj.

Rights organisation Consumers Association of Bangladesh (CAB) energy adviser M Shamsul Alam told Prothom Alo that REB operates on cross-subsidy. Profitable cooperatives support loss-making ones. Therefore, there is no scope to consider separate pricing for 21 cooperatives. He said PDB is shifting its “exploitative cost burden” onto everyone else.​
 

Stakeholders urge BERC to reform power sector instead of raising tariffs

bdnews24.com

Published :
May 21, 2026 19:39
Updated :
May 21, 2026 19:39

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Stakeholders at a public hearing have opposed proposals to increase retail electricity prices, urging the state regulator to focus on trimming institutional costs and rooting out corruption rather than squeezing consumers further.

On the final day of the two-day public consultation organised by the Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (BERC) at the Krishibid Institution Bangladesh, power sector experts, left-leaning politicians, and business leaders argued that the energy sector should be treated as a cost-to-cost public service rather than a profit-making enterprise.

They demanded that the financial fallout from capacity charges, high system losses, and inflated project costs no longer be passed on to everyday citizens.

During the session, six state-owned power distribution utilities presented their respective proposals to adjust retail tariffs.

According to the BERC Technical Evaluation Committee, the distribution companies proposed increasing their per-unit distribution margins by up to Tk 2.05 per unit.

NESCO sought the highest hike at Tk 2.05 per unit, followed by DESCO at Tk 1.98 and REB at Tk 1.77. DPDC proposed a hike of Tk 1.54 per unit, while WZPDCO sought an increase of Tk 1.39. PDB proposed the lowest increase at Tk 0.85 per unit.​
 

Govt launches offshore energy bid round today
Set to offer 26 offshore blocks with sweeter terms to attract global giants
M AZIZUR RAHMAN

Published :
May 24, 2026 08:13
Updated :
May 24, 2026 08:13

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Bangladesh is set to formally launch its long-awaited offshore bidding round today (Sunday), offering 26 hydrocarbon-exploration blocks to international oil companies (IOCs) under significantly improved contractual terms.

The move marks one of the government's most ambitious efforts in recent years to attract foreign investment into the country's energy sector amid growing concerns over long-term energy security.

The fresh bid round comes as Bangladesh seeks to reduce its vulnerability to global fuel market disruptions caused by the prolonged Middle East crisis and restrictions on vessel movements through the Strait of Hormuz.

Officials say the revised production-sharing framework includes major incentives aimed at reviving international interest after previous offshore tenders failed to secure participation from global energy firms.

The Energy and Mineral Resources Division (EMRD) under the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources is expected to announce the bid round at a press briefing at the Bangladesh Secretariat, a senior EMRD official told the FE on Saturday.

Eleven of the offshore blocks to be on offer are located in shallow waters and 15 in deep sea areas, he said.

The shallow-sea blocks on offer are SS-01, SS-02, SS-03, SS-04, SS-05, SS-06, SS-07, SS-08, SS-09, SS-10 and SS-11.

The deep-sea blocks on offer are DS-08, DS-09, DS-10, DS-11, DS-12, DS-13, DS-14, DS-15, DS-16, DS-17, DS-18, DS-19, DS-20, DS-21 and DS-22.

Global oil and gas majors including ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell and BP have already made inquiries about the forthcoming bid round, the official added.

The cabinet committee on economic affairs has already approved the "Bangladesh Offshore Model PSC 2026", paving the way for state-run Petrobangla to announce the 2026 bidding round.

The deadline for bid submissions has been fixed for November 30, 2026.

The newly elected BNP-led government has moved quickly to launch the bid round and strengthen the country's future energy security by identifying new hydrocarbon reserves against the backdrop of the persistent Middle East crisis and restrictions on vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Petrobangla has further sweetened the draft production-sharing contract (PSC) to attract IOCs in the forthcoming bidding round, a senior Petrobangla official said.

He said the mandatory contribution to the workers' profit participation fund (WPPF) had been reduced to 1.5 per cent from the previous 5.0 per cent.

Besides, a decision has been taken to ease obligations relating to the construction of hydrocarbon pipelines following discoveries and subsequent operations, he added.

Full repatriation of profits, no signature bonus or royalty, and attractive wellhead gas prices linked to international benchmark Brent crude - with floor and ceiling prices determined on the basis of the lowest and highest average Brent prices over the previous five years - are among the key contract features.

Contractors will also be entitled to mutually agreed pipeline tariffs, to be paid by the buyer, to support pipeline investments for both shallow and deep-sea blocks.

The contracts also include exemptions from duties on equipment and machinery imported for petroleum operations during exploration and production phases, while contractors' corporate income tax liabilities will be borne by Petrobangla.

Sources said not a single IOC participated in the latest offshore bidding round launched under the previous Awami League government, although several companies had purchased bid documents.

Market insiders said lack of confidence among IOCs, coupled with inadequate data on offshore blocks, contributed to the poor response.

Petrobangla had kept the offer open for nine months after floating the international tender on March 10, 2024.

At that time, 24 offshore blocks - 15 deep-sea and nine shallow-water blocks - were offered for exploration leases.

Before the latest bid round, Bangladesh had launched only one offshore bidding round over the past decade, in 2017, and that was limited to three deep-water blocks, according to Petrobangla.

Although Posco-Daewoo was awarded deep-water block DS-12 following the bidding, the company withdrew from the block in 2020 after conducting a 2D seismic survey.

Previously, Petrobangla floated another bidding round in 2012, through which three shallow-water blocks and one deep-water block were awarded to contractors.

Currently, four IOCs hold active PSCs, either individually or through joint ventures, for exploration in three shallow-water blocks in Bangladesh.

US oil major Chevron is actively exploring and producing natural gas in three gas fields under onshore blocks 12, 13 and 14. Singapore-based KrisEnergy is producing natural gas from the Bangura field under Block 9. ONGC Videsh and Oil India are jointly exploring shallow-water blocks SS-04 and SS-09.​
 

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