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[๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฉ] Save the Rivers/Forests/Hills-----Save the Environment

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G Bangladesh Defense
[๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ฉ] Save the Rivers/Forests/Hills-----Save the Environment
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Progress in recovering forest land, but pollution, polythene use not halted

Mostafa YusufDhaka
Published: 19 Aug 2025, 22: 14

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Environment and rights activists, as well children participate in a sit-in programme organised by Janovassyo and earki in front of the Parliament Complex in Dhaka on 13 December 2024, demanding the formulation of an action plan immediately to prevent air pollution in the capital. File photo

Although action plans have been drawn up to tackle river and air pollution, comprehensive control over environmental degradation remains a challenge.

The caretaker government, in its one year, however, has achieved some success in recovering forest land. Since 5 August last year, the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change has cancelled allocations made for development projects and brought nearly 10,000 acres of forest land back under state protection.

During the same period, attempts were made to curb the use of polythene, though these efforts have so far failedโ€”drawing criticism.

In Coxโ€™s Bazar, recovery of forestland has offered some respite, but according to the Forest Departmentโ€™s records, 19 elephants, an already critically endangered species, have died over the past year.

A dedicated elephant conservation project has now been launched. The ministry also pledged to free at least one river from encroachment and pollution, a promise that is yet to be fulfilled.

Meanwhile, confusion over the number of rivers in the country has at least been resolved. The National River Protection Commission and the Water Development Board have now produced a joint, standardised list, recording a total of 1,294 rivers across the country.

In efforts to curb noise pollution, the Department of Environment designated Shahjalal International Airport and the Secretariat area as โ€œsilent zonesโ€. Despite running awareness campaigns, noise levels in these zones remain unchecked.

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For burning garbage on the side of the road, the air has gone hazy with heavy smoke. This is polluting the environment on one hand while increasing health risks on the other. Photo taken from Imamganj Beribadh area in Dhaka on 17 May. Dipu Malakar

Speaking to Prothom Alo, Environment Adviser Syeda Rizwana Hasan observed, โ€œThe level of pollution inflicted on Dhakaโ€™s rivers over the years cannot possibly be reversed in a year or two. Nevertheless, we have finalised plans to free four rivers in Dhaka, and 16 outside the capital, from both pollution and encroachment. We have identified the main sources of pollution and compiled a list of those responsible.โ€

Speaking on noise pollution, she added, โ€œUnder the new noise-control regulations being drafted, traffic sergeants will be empowered to fine drivers for honking the horns of their vehicles. At present, the law does not permit them to impose such penalties. However, without changing the deeply entrenched culture of excessive horn use, legal measures alone will not do.โ€

Cancellation of land allocations
During the previous Awami League administration, โ€œmega development projectsโ€ exerted heavy pressure on forest land in Coxโ€™s Bazar.

Twenty acres of reserved forest in Ramu were allotted to the Bangladesh Football Federation for a football academy, 700 acres in Shuknachhari were allocated to the Public Administration Ministry for a civil service academy, and 9,467 acres in Sonadia were set aside for the Bangladesh Economic Zones Authority (BEZA).

In addition, in 2017, 155 acres were allocated in the name of the brother of former cabinet secretary Shafiul Alam. Over the past year, these allocations have been cancelled and the land brought back under the control of the Forest Department.

The caretaker government has also scrapped a proposal by former environment minister Shahab Uddin to build a safari park at Lathitila reserved forest in Sylhet at a cost of Tk 1,000 crore (Tk 10 billion).

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Air pollution File photo

According to Forest Department data, between August 2024 and June 2025 some 5,100 acres of forest land were recovered from encroachers. The planting of invasive species, Akashmoni and eucalyptus, has been banned. Beel Joanna and Beel Bhela in Rajshahi have been declared wetland sanctuaries.

Across 24 districts, a total of 138,613 acres of forest land remain under illegal occupation by 88,212 encroachers. In Gazipur, Chattogram and Coxโ€™s Bazar, powerful land-grabbers are yet to be removed. Since 5 August last year, around 100 acres in Gazipur have been newly encroached; roughly 70 acres have been recovered.

Speaking about the overall situation, Chief Conservator of Forests Md Amir Hossain Chowdhury told Prothom Alo, โ€œWe have categorised forest encroachments into four types. Those are: industrial, resort, agricultural and market encroachments. In Gazipur, recovering forest land from industrial facilities is particularly difficult, as many have prepared forged documents and filed cases based on those. Until those cases are disposed of, eviction cannot proceed. We are, however, regularly removing the other three categories.โ€

Abu Morshed Chowdhury, president of the Coxโ€™s Bazar Civil Society, said that in the past year no public body or influential person has been able to secure new forest allocations in the district; on the contrary, several institutional and individual allocations have been cancelled.

He further said that encroachment on the Bakkhali River has also been halted. Although hill cutting has decreased, it still occurs clandestinely. However, the offenders are being prosecuted.

In Tangailโ€™s Madhupur, the Environment and Forest Ministry has launched efforts to restore the natural Shal forest.

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Chimneys spew out black fumes from the brick kilns, polluting the air. The picture was taken from Mollar Hat area of South Keraniganj File photo

Speaking about this, Abu Naser Md Mohsin, divisional forest officer for Tangail, told Prothom Alo, โ€œWe have prepared a master plan for restoring the Shal forest. As a first step, 750 acres have been planted with Shal and associated native tree species such as Haritaki, Bahera, Halud and Chapalish. A further 1,100 acres of Shal forest will follow.โ€

Steps to conserve biodiversity on Saint Martinโ€™s Island

The authorities have restricted tourist inflows and approved a Tk 70 million (7 crore) programme to create alternative livelihoods for residents dependent on tourism to protect biodiversity on Saint Martinโ€™s Island.

Under the interim government's decisions, tourists may visit the island in November but must return the same day. In December and January, visits and overnight stays are permitted, subject to a daily cap of 2,000 tourists. From February, tourist access will be suspended.

Polythene and air-pollution remain challenges

In October 2024, the Environment Ministry issued a gazette notification banning polythene at malls and superstores. While compliance has been achieved in superstores, kitchen markets continue to use polythene, largely because affordable alternatives remain scarce. Some 50 tonnes of polythene have been seized in enforcement drives over the past two months.

At Karwan Bazar in Dhaka, most shoppers are still seen carrying vegetables, fish and other essentials in polythene bags.

Asked why he was using polythene despite the ban, private-sector employee Salam Miyazi told Prothom Alo, โ€œPeople will keep using polythene until substitutes are readily available. The ban will work only if alternatives are on offer at a reasonable price.โ€

Speaking about this, Adviser Syeda Rizwana Hasan said, โ€œWe managed to stop polythene in superstores because persuading the operators there was relatively easier. Kitchen markets are different; we could not yet impose effective controls at the point of production. Besides, habits also matter. To end polythene use we must act on three fronts simultaneously - production controls, market monitoring and public awareness. That is exactly what we are trying to do.โ€

To curb industrial pollution, the government moved to install CCTV monitoring to verify whether effluent treatment plants (ETPs) are actually operated.

However, an official at the Department of Environment, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that while most factories have installed cameras, oversight remains inconsistent.

There has been no improvement in overall air quality over the past year. Although enforcement against polluting brick kilns has intensified, open waste burning, emissions from unfit vehicles and transboundary haze continue unabated.

The Department of Environment reports that 830 brick kilns were demolished over the year.

Savar has been designated as the countryโ€™s first โ€œdegraded airshedโ€, with a phased plan to shut down major sources of pollution there.

Professor Ahmad Kamruzzaman Majumder, dean of science at Stamford University and founder of the Centre for Atmospheric Pollution Studies (CAPS), told Prothom Alo, โ€œEffective action has been taken against non-compliant brick kilns, and there has been progress on forest restoration. But the circular on vehicular emissions has not been enforced in practice. That is a failure of the government.โ€

โ€œStronger measures should also have been taken to curb river pollution,โ€ he observed.​
 

When climate crisis meets corruption
SYED MUHAMMED SHOWAIB

Published :
Nov 15, 2025 00:20

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Bangladesh stands among the world's most climate-vulnerable nations, not only in statistical rankings but in the lived experience of millions. The country has entered an era in which the scale and frequency of natural disasters can no longer be predicted within familiar seasonal or geographical patterns. In the past year alone, districts such as Feni, Noakhali, Lakshmipur and parts of Cumilla were inundated by severe flooding, a calamity soon repeated in Sylhet regions. For the northern districts, floodwaters have become almost annual occurrences as monsoon flows from upstream regions in India overwhelm local rivers. Floods are not the only effects of climate change. Saline intrusion is happening faster in coastal areas due to rising sea levels which is hurting farming and driving internal displacement.

The seasons themselves no longer behave as they once did. Bangladesh was once defined by six distinct seasons that were culturally and environmentally recognisable. Today, these seasonal transitions have blurred. Winters are comparatively warmer and sometimes so mild that cold wave warnings come as a surprise. The shift from late autumn to early winter passes almost unnoticed. High temperatures persist for longer periods and heatwaves are more frequent, affecting public health, labour productivity and water availability. At the same time, river erosion continues to claim vast stretches of land. Homes, croplands, mosques, schools and marketplaces collapse into rivers as currents intensify. Communities relocate inland only to confront the same fate once again.

There is no real debate about the gravity of climate impacts confronting Bangladesh. The country ranked seventh in the 2020 Global Climate Risk Index, which evaluated impacts from 1999 to 2019, and ninth in the 2023 World Risk Index for disaster risk. Climate finance is directed to Bangladesh for the simple reason that it stands on the frontlines of global warming and carries burden it did not create. Yet at the very moment when the global community meets in Brazil for COP30 to discuss climate justice and future financing commitments, the Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB) has reported that more than US$248 million of Bangladesh's climate funds have been lost to corruption. As far as timing goes, this report could not have come as a more damaging moment. While world leaders gather in Belem to discuss climate finance, this revelation forces a hard look at how well climate funds are protected and how faithfully they reach those who depend on them.

Bangladesh's delegation arrived at the summit with clear priorities including a new global climate finance goal of $300 billion annually by 2035, operationalisation of the Loss and Damage Fund by 2026 and a doubling of adaptation finance. These are legitimate and urgent demands. However, the TIB report provides potent ammunition for critics in donor capitals who argue that financial commitments are wasted, thereby undermining the political consensus necessary to scale up funding. How can developed nations be persuaded to fulfil their $100 billion pledge and move towards trillions as Bangladesh proposes when evidence suggests that even limited existing funds are so easily misappropriated!

The diverted amount represents more than half of the Bangladesh Climate Change Trust Fund. These resources were intended to construct embankments, strengthen coastal livelihoods, improve water systems, build climate resilient infrastructure and support affected communities. Yet, according to the TIB report, project selection often had less to do with climate vulnerability and more with political convenience. Members of the Trustee Board and the Technical Committee exercised discretionary authority in ways that served partisan or personal interests paving the way for corruption within the fund's allocation process.

The TIB report further revealed that over 15 per cent of the Climate Trust Fund's money remains stuck in a financially-distressed bank. Recovery of these funds remains uncertain, which indicates a greater institutional deficiency in preserving public resources. International climate finance partners expect transparency, credible monitoring and independent audits as the bare minimum. When fund misuse becomes the headline, trust from those partners inevitably erodes and future allocations become uncertain. Undoubtedly, this has made the already difficult negotiations at COP30 even more fraught. For the people of Bangladesh, the implication is a double victimisation. They are first victimised by the climate impacts they did little to cause and second by the theft of resources meant for their protection.

In addition to the corruption scandal, there are concerns about how well the climate fund is being utilised in other areas. In many climate change adaptation projects implemented by NGOs, a significant portion of funding are dedicated to what is described as capacity building. In practice, this often means training sessions and workshops. Many donors and aid agencies view this as an essential project component, and NGOs respond accordingly. However, the outcomes have frequently been limited. Participants attend sessions, listen, take meals and return home only to resume their old practices. The intended behavioural transformation rarely materialises. Ironically, such expenditure is often categorised as successfully utilised, even though the practical impact remains negligible. This situation clearly calls for a more mature and realistic approach, one that focuses not only on capacity development but also on constructing physical infrastructure to help people withstand the effects of climate change.

The failure to protect climate funds at home weakens Bangladesh's position in advocating for fair global financing arrangements. The inadequacy of current global commitments is beyond dispute, but the legitimacy of these demands is now eclipsed by domestic governance lapses. To regain credibility, words must give way to action. The Climate Change Trust Fund should be reconstituted with non-partisan and independent expertise. Transparent audit mechanisms must be established, and community level monitoring and civil society oversight must be integrated at the project design stage.

The exposure of corruption ahead of COP30 presents a difficult moment, yet it also offers an opportunity to embed strong anti-corruption conditions into future climate finance frameworks. This proactive step is the only way to build the global trust necessary for these funds to be effective and impactful.​
 

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