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Bangladesh announces power sector deregulation

Lankan Ranger

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Bangladesh announces power sector deregulation

Bangladesh has announced a sweeping deregulation scheme for its power sector in a bid to ease the country's crippling electricity shortages, a senior government official said.

Foreign investors will now be allowed to set up power plants without winning a government contract and to sell on the national grid, Toufique-e-Elahi Chowdhury, energy advisor to Bangladesh's prime minister, said late Wednesday.

"We hope billions of dollars will now be invested by local and foreign entrepreneurs. This will boost electricity supply and foster industrialisation. It will also help us trim power shortages to zero by 2013," he told AFP.

The government will buy 30 percent of the power produced by private companies and allow them to use the national grid to sell the rest of their electricity directly to consumers, at government-determined rates, he said.

Analysts welcomed the move, saying the current bidding process takes months, is often tainted with graft and favours incompetent firms with ties to the government.

The deregulation follows growing demand from the business community, particularly in the garment sector, to fix the country's power crisis.

Bangladesh's exports have been growing at a record 35 percent a month in the first five months of the fiscal year, which starts in July, driven by garment exports.

Garment industry bodies say the country's factories are flooded with orders they cannot accept due to productivity limits imposed by constant power cuts.

Bangladesh has long suffered severe power outages because of demands from its fast-growing economy. The power shortfall is especially acute in the hot summer months from April to October.

Years of under-investment mean Bangladesh's power plants generate around 4,000 megawatts of electricity a day, while demand totals 6,000 megawatts -- a figure growing by 500 megawatts a year due to rapid industrialisation.

Bangladesh announces power sector deregulation - LANKA BUSINESS ONLINE
 
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Bangladesh announces power sector deregulation

Bangladesh has announced a sweeping deregulation scheme for its power sector in a bid to ease the country's crippling electricity shortages, a senior government official said.

Foreign investors will now be allowed to set up power plants without winning a government contract and to sell on the national grid, Toufique-e-Elahi Chowdhury, energy advisor to Bangladesh's prime minister, said late Wednesday.

Bangladesh announces power sector deregulation - LANKA BUSINESS ONLINE[/url]
This is one of the greatest decisions that a BD govt can make. I have been waiting for at least one decade for the deregulation of power sector in BD. It is about 40 years when I heard first that the SL govt would dergulate the postal service and private companies would participate in that sector. It surprised me to see a visionery decision in SL.

In case of BD, the decision to deregulate the power sector is better late than never. What the GoB should have done 20 years ago with the power sector is becoming a reality now. If the GoB relinquishes all controls over the power production and distribution/transmission sectors, then certainly the BD and foreign companies would build plants.

About transmission/distribution, govt regulations should certainly be enacted so as to realize hurdle-free distributions of electricity.
 
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Could someone please explain to me what it means to "deregulate" our power sector?
 
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This is one of the greatest decisions that a BD govt can make. I have been waiting for at least one decade for the deregulation of power sector in BD. It is about 40 years when I heard first that the SL govt would dergulate the postal service and private companies would participate in that sector. It surprised me to see a visionery decision in SL.

In case of BD, the decision to deregulate the power sector is better late than never. What the GoB should have done 20 years ago with the power sector is becoming a reality now. If the GoB relinquishes all controls over the power production and distribution/transmission sectors, then certainly the BD and foreign companies would build plants.

About transmission/distribution, govt regulations should certainly be enacted so as to realize hurdle-free distributions of electricity.

Mate, I hate to disagree on you with this one. Deregulating markets come with very high prices. Enron tried to enter India's market, people resisted, Bolvia's water sysem was privatised which eventually the people resisted, Chile was another example of privatising leads failure. This are tactics often used by american corporations to enter foreign markets which normally end up resulting in extremely high unemployment rate, higher prices and so on.

(I am doing a research paper on Privatisation for my uni course and according to researches and datas, no country was ever better off in the LONG run)
 
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Mate, I hate to disagree on you with this one. Deregulating markets come with very high prices. Enron tried to enter India's market, people resisted, Bolvia's water sysem was privatised which eventually the people resisted, Chile was another example of privatising leads failure. This are tactics often used by american corporations to enter foreign markets which normally end up resulting in extremely high unemployment rate, higher prices and so on.

(I am doing a research paper on Privatisation for my uni course and according to researches and datas, no country was ever better off in the LONG run)

I oppose complete privatization of the power sector but you need private sector to complent public sector. Even though licensing made open yet the price still be fixed by government. There will be a guidline where the price, fuel, sales are predefined by the government and if you wish that you can make some money out of it then welcome.
 
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