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Bangladesh Economy: News & Updates

Major vietnam exports are through FDI. Their domestic companies are dieing due to lack of orders.
Sometimes, I am surprised to read newspaper reports that say Vietnam export/import is almost equal to their GDP. It seems by reading your post that it is all due to FDI infusion of money. Click the links. The first one says the export in 2015 is 114.53 billion US dollar and the second link says the GDP is 193.6 billion US dollar. So, Vietnam exports 70% of what they produce. Very strange. But, you have pinpointed why it is so.

http://www.statista.com/statistics/444771/export-of-goods-to-vietnam/
http://www.statista.com/statistics/444771/export-of-goods-to-vietnam/
 
Dhaka-Rangpur highway to turn into four-lane

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina presides over the weekly ECNEC meeting held at the NEC conference room on Tuesday. –UNB Photo

The Dhaka-Rangpur highway will be upgraded into a four-lane one as the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) on Tuesday approved a project for improvement of the road connectivity with northern districts.


The Elenga-Hatikamrul-Rangpur Highway Four-Lane Upgradation project has got the approval from the weekly ECNEC meeting held at the NEC conference room with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in the chair, reports UNB..

After completion of this project entire Dhaka-Rangpur road connectivity will turn into four lanes as another project is already underway to upgrade the 70-km Joydevpur-Tangail-Elenga highway into a four-lane one.

The project involves Tk 118.81 billion in a bid to facilitate sub-regional road connectivity with India, Bhutan and Nepal. The ADB will finance the project from the regional fund called-South Asia Sub-regional Economic Cooperation (SASEC).

The minister said a total of seven projects were approved with an overall cost of Tk 128.94 billion.

"Of the total project cost, Tk 33.68 billion will come from the national exchequer while Tk 95.25 billion as project assistance," he said. All the approved seven projects are new ones, he said.

About the implementation rate of the Annual Development Programme (ADP) for the July-August period of the current fiscal year, he said the implementing ministries and divisions spent Tk 47.56 billion in the first two months with an utilisation rate of 3.86 per cent.

The implementation rate in the first two months of the last fiscal year was 3 per cent with an expenditure of Tk 33.48 billion.

Mustafa Kamal said Roads and Highways Department under the Roads and Highways Division will implement the SASEC Road Link project by August 2021. Of the total project cost, Tk 25.41 billion will come from the state coffer while the rest of Tk 93.39 billion will come from project assistance from the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

Under the project, some 190.40 kilometres of highway on Elenga-Hatikamrul-Rangpur highway, which is also part of the national highway N-5, would be upgraded into four-lane would go through Kalihati upazila of Tangail, Sirajganj Sadar, Kamarkhand, Ullapara and Raiganj upazilas, Bogra Sadar, Sherpur and Shibganj upazilas, Gobindaganj, Polashbari and Sadullapur upazilas of Gaibandha and Rangpur Sadar, Pirganj and Mithapukur upazilas.

Once the project is implemented, Mustafa Kamal said the road connectivity with the northern districts will improve further while a provision will be there to boost sub-regional connectivity with India and Nepal through Banglabandha and with India and Bhutan through Burimari.

Under the project, there will be some 194.94 hectare land acquisition, some 127,043 cubic metres of earth work, some 190.40 kilometres of new pavement construction, including separate lane for the slow-moving vehicles, construction of 32 bridges and 3 flyovers, one railway overpass, 161 culverts, 39 underpasses, 11 Pedestrian overpasses, one interchange, establishment of RHD centre of excellence and road operation unit.

The Planning Minister said Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina at the meeting asked the authorities concerned to set up industrial estates keeping certain distance from the highways and roads so that there could be a provision for further expansion.

The other projects approved at the meeting are Meteorological radar development of Dhaka and Rangpur with Tk 2.08 billion, Establishment of Innovation and Entrepreneurs Development Academy with Tk 2.29 billion, BSCIC electrical commodity production and light engineering industrial estate with Tk 2.13 billion, BSCIC industrial estate, Raozan with Tk 798.4 million, Construction of link road from Sirajuddowla Road to Shah Amanat Bridge (Bakolia Access) with Tk 2.05 billion and Re-Excavation of Bhodra and Salta Rivers to address water logging of Khulna district with Tk 760 million.

Ministers and State Ministers, Planning Commission members and secretaries concerned were present at the meeting. –RH
http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/2016/09/06/44851/Dhaka-Rangpur-highway-to-turn-into-four-lane
 
Seen out the window - Dhaka on a rainy day....

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I was looking to post some old Dhaka Metro survey images somewhere but this is the closest thing I found. Maybe we can re-name the thread 'Public Transport development' instead of what it is now.

Soil Survey near Sher-e-Bangla Nagar
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Topographic survey
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Geological testing at BUET
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http://www.dhakatribune.com/busines...coxs-bazar-marine-drive-linked-asian-highway/
Sitakunda-Cox’s Bazar marine drive to be linked with Asian Highway

The Marine Drive Expressway and Sitakunda-Chittagong-Cox’s Bazar Coastal Protection Works at a cost of $2.8bn
Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs has approved a Chinese firm to finance two priority projects: Dhaka-Sylhet four-lane road and Sitakunda-Cox’s Bazar marine drive expressway.

The projects of the Road Transport and Highways Division got the committee’s nod at a meeting yesterday, with Finance Minister AMA Muhith in the chair.

Of them, the 160km marine drive expressway will be connected with the Asian Highway-41 and the Bangladesh–China–India–Myanmar (BCIM) Economic Corridor.

The two projects will be implemented under government-to-government deal, said Mustafizur Rahman, additional secretary at the Cabinet Division, at a post-meeting press briefing.

According to the proposal, the first project involves upgrading the 226km Dhaka-Sylhet road into a four-lane highway at an estimated cost of $1.58bn and the Marine Drive Expressway and Sitakunda-Chittagong-Cox’s Bazar Coastal Protection Works at a cost of $2.8bn. However, the cost may increase as the project work goes on, says the proposal.

Two highway projects will be constructed by the China Harbor Engineering Limited and the Bank of China will finance on G2G basis.

The Road Transport and Highways Division, in its proposal, said the Chinese companies will implement the projects through the G2G deal. On August 22, Finance Minister AMA Muhith wrote the Chinese ambassador in Bangladesh, Ma Mingqiang, for funding of Dhaka-Sylhet highway into four-lane project construction.

In recent years, the government has been trying to get the Chinese financial assistance to implement 18 projects worth over $14bn.

Earlier, the projects like Info-Sarker Phase III of $150m and tunnel construction under the River Karnaphuli of over $1bn were awarded to the Chinese companies without any tender.

On July 20, the cabinet committee on public purchase decided to purchase service worth over $4.3bn from the China Railway Engineering Corporation to lay Dhaka-Jessore rail line through Padma Bridge.
@Species @UKBengali @Bilal9
 
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Good news. upgrading the 226km Dhaka-Sylhet road into a four-lane highway is long overdue but it is being done to connect the seven sisters to Kolkata via Padma bridge. Which is fine. All we desire is that Indian shippers pay a fair agreed upon transit fee....

But it will be our loss if we can't use this opportunity to expand our markets in that part of India where people are clamoring to upgrade their lifestyles.

Bangladesh should keep pushing to get rid of Indian non-tariff barriers and ask for increased duty-concessions in Indian market.

Pran Foods has already invested in industrial activity in Tripura and Bangladeshi manufacturers should go to Nagaland, Mizoram, Assam and establish strong reciprocal relationships with Chamber of Commerce's in larger towns to increase trade (natural and forest resources), tourism (for Bangladeshi people) and industrial investment activity.

It is quite amazing that all this has not happened so far - even considering the simple proximity.
 
12:00 AM, September 22, 2016 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:00 AM, September 22, 2016
China-funded roads get green light
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Rejaul Karim Byron
The cabinet committee on economic affairs yesterday approved the Roads and Highways Department's proposals allowing China Harbour Engineering Company to build two mega-roads for about Tk 38,000 crore.

The projects will be carried out with Chinese soft loans and without any competitive bidding.

One of the projects involves expanding the 226km Dhaka-Sylhet road to a four-lane highway.

Some Tk 12,665 crore has been earmarked for the project, but the proposal says the cost may go up 35 percent in the final estimate.

The Roads and Highways Department last year signed a non-binding preliminary agreement with China Harbour, under which a feasibility study and a detailed design have been prepared.

Finance Minister AMA Muhith himself is interested about the project and has written several times to the Chinese government about it. Yesterday's cabinet committee meeting was chaired by Muhith.

China Harbour has been selected for implementation of another project, which includes construction of a marine drive and a 160km four-lane expressway and land reclamation from Sitakunda to Cox's Bazar.

The preliminary cost of the project has been estimated at Tk 25,573 crore. After detailed appraisal, the cost may shoot up.

A non-binding preliminary agreement was signed last year for this as well.

Kolatoli-Inani-Shilkhali marine drive spanning 48km has already been built with the government's own fund, with another 32km of Shilkhali-Teknaf-Sabrang highway currently under construction.

When the new marine drive is completed, economic activities in the region will increase and the tourism industry will get a boost, said the proposal. Besides, the marine drive will play a big role in connectivity with the Asian Highway and Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar corridor.

When the government gives consent, the state-owned company will ensure financing of the projects by the Chinese government, road ministry officials said.

The two projects were approved under the new policy for implementation of projects with soft loans from China.

Bangladesh will continue to allow China to select contractors only for priority projects financed with low-cost loans from Beijing, as Dhaka's efforts to enforce limited bidding are yet to produce any positive outcome.

The cabinet committee made the decision in August. However, before taking the decision, approval has to be taken from the cabinet committee on economic affairs.

For more than a year, the government has been pushing for putting in place a limited tendering system for all projects funded with concessional loans from China.

But the issue remains pending as China has not given its final decision on the limited tendering despite agreeing on the issue and exchanging several letters and holding talks over a period of more than a year. This prompted the government to take a decision to follow a two-way policy for projects financed with low-cost loans from China.
http://www.thedailystar.net/business/china-funded-roads-get-green-light-1287598
 
Transit to destroy local industries
Steelmakers air such fear

Shihabur Rahman

Iron and steel rod manufacturers fear that the transit facility offered to India will badly affect Bangladeshi industries, particularly theirs, in different ways.

They think the facility will 'destroy' the present market of their products in the seven northeastern states of India -- Arunachal, Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland and Tripura -- and mar the potential of further export.




Leaders of three associations of rod manufacturers -- Bangladesh Auto Re-rolling and Steel Mills Association (BARSMA), Bangladesh Steel Mill Owners' Association (BSMOA) and Bangladesh Re-rolling Mills Association (BRMA) -- discussed their concerns at a joint meeting Saturday.

They have decided to take up the matter with the government shortly.

The transshipment of Indian goods to the landlocked northeastern states, called Seven Sisters, through Bangladesh territory began in mid-June this year under the Protocol on Inland Waterways Trade and Transit (PIWTT) between the two next-door neighbours.

The first consignment, comprising iron products, arrived at port of call at Ashuganj in Brahmanbaria from Kolkata on board an Indian ship on June 17 and it was then taken to Agartala, the capital of Tripura.

Bangladesh levies a fee of Tk 192.22 per tonne for such transshipment.

The country gets another Tk 50 per tonne for providing security to the consignment from Ashuganj to Akhaura and Tk 10 for shipment of per-tonne goods through two channels -- Mongla-Ghosiakhali and Gabkhan.


The transit has reduced the distance between the eastern and northeastern parts of India to almost one-third as currently goods travel through Siliguri corridor to the northeastern states.

BARSMA Chairman Sheikh Masudul Alam Masud said Bangladesh will fail to tap the potential market worth billions of dollar in the Seven Sisters only for the meagre fees from India.

Bangladesh currently exports cement, rod, ceramic, beverage, garments, plastic goods, melamine, cosmetics, etc to India's northeast.

"The volume of rod export to the northeastern India is still not significant. But we had the potential to raise it substantially. However, the transit facility has destroyed it," he said.

According to exporters, India allows duty-free access of many Bangladeshi products to its market but the governments of the northeastern states have now imposed 15 per cent VAT on sale of those, blunting the competitive edge of the Bangladeshi goods.

"Now the state governments are urging Bangladeshi entrepreneurs to invest there, but we are not in a position to do so to maintain our market," said BRMA Vice President Sirajul Islam.

Re-rolling and steel-mill owners also fears penetration of Indian goods, meant for transshipment, into Bangladesh market.

"There is every chance that the Indian products bound for the Seven Sisters will end up selling on Bangladesh market," said Masud.

He referred to the smuggling of a huge amount of contraband Phensedyl syrup from India into Bangladesh every year to substantiate the fears.

"Phensedyl made in India is illegal in Bangladesh. But can we stop it from coming in here," he questioned.

Rod manufacturers will advise the government to raise the transshipment fee substantially so that the prices of Indian products increase and come at par with Bangladeshi goods in the northeastern states.

They will also request the government to check penetration of Indian goods, destined for the seven states, into Bangladesh market.

Shipping Minister Shajahan Khan told an event that marked the beginning of the transshipment that the fee would increase to Tk 700-800 per tonne when the 'system would be automated' and other facilities ensured.

It may be mentioned here that CPD recommended tariff at around Tk. 1000 per tone for transshipment. The rate being paid is around one fifth of that amount.

This will create huge issues locally in business circles and cannot be ignored.
 
Transit to destroy local industries
Steelmakers air such fear

Shihabur Rahman

Iron and steel rod manufacturers fear that the transit facility offered to India will badly affect Bangladeshi industries, particularly theirs, in different ways.

They think the facility will 'destroy' the present market of their products in the seven northeastern states of India -- Arunachal, Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Mizoram, Nagaland and Tripura -- and mar the potential of further export.




Leaders of three associations of rod manufacturers -- Bangladesh Auto Re-rolling and Steel Mills Association (BARSMA), Bangladesh Steel Mill Owners' Association (BSMOA) and Bangladesh Re-rolling Mills Association (BRMA) -- discussed their concerns at a joint meeting Saturday.

They have decided to take up the matter with the government shortly.

The transshipment of Indian goods to the landlocked northeastern states, called Seven Sisters, through Bangladesh territory began in mid-June this year under the Protocol on Inland Waterways Trade and Transit (PIWTT) between the two next-door neighbours.

The first consignment, comprising iron products, arrived at port of call at Ashuganj in Brahmanbaria from Kolkata on board an Indian ship on June 17 and it was then taken to Agartala, the capital of Tripura.

Bangladesh levies a fee of Tk 192.22 per tonne for such transshipment.

The country gets another Tk 50 per tonne for providing security to the consignment from Ashuganj to Akhaura and Tk 10 for shipment of per-tonne goods through two channels -- Mongla-Ghosiakhali and Gabkhan.


The transit has reduced the distance between the eastern and northeastern parts of India to almost one-third as currently goods travel through Siliguri corridor to the northeastern states.

BARSMA Chairman Sheikh Masudul Alam Masud said Bangladesh will fail to tap the potential market worth billions of dollar in the Seven Sisters only for the meagre fees from India.

Bangladesh currently exports cement, rod, ceramic, beverage, garments, plastic goods, melamine, cosmetics, etc to India's northeast.

"The volume of rod export to the northeastern India is still not significant. But we had the potential to raise it substantially. However, the transit facility has destroyed it," he said.

According to exporters, India allows duty-free access of many Bangladeshi products to its market but the governments of the northeastern states have now imposed 15 per cent VAT on sale of those, blunting the competitive edge of the Bangladeshi goods.

"Now the state governments are urging Bangladeshi entrepreneurs to invest there, but we are not in a position to do so to maintain our market," said BRMA Vice President Sirajul Islam.

Re-rolling and steel-mill owners also fears penetration of Indian goods, meant for transshipment, into Bangladesh market.

"There is every chance that the Indian products bound for the Seven Sisters will end up selling on Bangladesh market," said Masud.

He referred to the smuggling of a huge amount of contraband Phensedyl syrup from India into Bangladesh every year to substantiate the fears.

"Phensedyl made in India is illegal in Bangladesh. But can we stop it from coming in here," he questioned.

Rod manufacturers will advise the government to raise the transshipment fee substantially so that the prices of Indian products increase and come at par with Bangladeshi goods in the northeastern states.

They will also request the government to check penetration of Indian goods, destined for the seven states, into Bangladesh market.

Shipping Minister Shajahan Khan told an event that marked the beginning of the transshipment that the fee would increase to Tk 700-800 per tonne when the 'system would be automated' and other facilities ensured.

It may be mentioned here that CPD recommended tariff at around Tk. 1000 per tone for transshipment. The rate being paid is around one fifth of that amount.

This will create huge issues locally in business circles and cannot be ignored.

I thought that BD internal steel demand was so robustly growing that such concerns about Indian N.E market would be relative non-issues?

This seems to illustrate rather that BD steel industry (which I read only half of capacity is actually produced) is somewhat reliant on having its own potential captive market for its growth (as small as it may be) and now thats vanished too. BD growth of steel consumption per capita given its low base is not looking encouraging unless we have some new numbers for 2015 that illustrate otherwise.

I mean a logistics multiplier of 3 was needed to potentially keep N.E a viable market for BD steel? Thats not sustainble for any industry as integration increases regionally.
 
I thought that BD internal steel demand was so robustly growing that such concerns about Indian N.E market would be relative non-issues?

This seems to illustrate rather that BD steel industry (which I read only half of capacity is actually produced) is somewhat reliant on having its own potential captive market for its growth (as small as it may be) and now thats vanished too. BD growth of steel consumption per capita given its low base is not looking encouraging unless we have some new numbers for 2015 that illustrate otherwise.

I mean a logistics multiplier of 3 was needed to potentially keep N.E a viable market for BD steel? Thats not sustainble for any industry as integration increases regionally.

I think they are in the habit of whining...
 
The byways of Gulshan eagerly embrace the approaching festive dusk - past an exciting midsummer's day...


All image credits Meer Sadi
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Dhaka circular rly feasibility awaits approval

BSS

The feasibility study for the proposed circular rail network around the capital city is awaiting approval of the planning ministry. “The government has undertaken the project to build a circular railway network around Dhaka city to ease the pressure on the city’s roads,” a top official told BSS in the capital yesterday.

The official said that the railways ministry has estimated the cost for carrying out the feasibility study at Taka 29.32 crore.
According to the project details, the railways ministry has sent the proposal for carrying out feasibility study for the circular railway network in the capital city to the planning commission for approval on June 29, 2015.

It said the feasibility study would assess routes and points for smooth plying of the circular train. A project scrutiny committee of the railways ministry conducted a meeting on the project on March 18, 2015 and the feasibility study proposal was prepared in accordance with the decision of the meeting on June 9, 2015.

It said if the project is implemented the city dwellers would have some relief from the existing traffic jams.

Talking to BSS, Railways Minister M Mazibul Hoque said, “The Awami League government led by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has undertaken various projects to improve train services, procure locomotives, wagons, coaches, construct new bridges, expand tracks and build double lines on different routes for increased frequency of train movement.”

He said that the government has undertaken the circular railway project for smooth transportation of city dwellers.

“The overall railway service has been improved considerably as the present government through its sincere efforts expanded railway lines along with rehabilitation work and revived different routes to make this popular public transport easier for the passengers and carrying goods,” he said. “As a public mode of transport, the government has been implementing a comprehensive policy consulting with other departments concerned for improving railway services,” he said.

The minister said since independence, the railway department has been neglected, but the present government has formed a separate ministry for Railways and taken development projects to improve its services.
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Rail distance to be cut 90 km of 320 km between DAC & CTG - 200 KMPH capable track to be introduced

FHM Humayan Kabir
The government has moved to cut the rail route between Dhaka and Chittagong by nearly 90 kilometres (kms) with a straight new line to be built for high-speed train, officials said.

Bangladesh Railway (BR) officials said they would build a fresh rail track from Dhaka to Comilla via Laksam parallel with the existing Dhaka-Chittagong highway to reduce the travel time and distance both.

Besides, they added, the state-owned Railway will upgrade the existing rail track between the capital, Dhaka, and the port city of Chittagong for introducing 200-km-speed trains.

"Reducing the distance by nearly 90kms between Dhaka and Chittagong through railway, the proposed track will meet the existing rail track in Comilla. In that case, the Chittagong-bound trains need not travel through the current route via Tongi-Bhairab-Akhaura-Brahmanbaria line," Chief Planning Officer of the BR Mr Anwarul Huq told the FE.

He said they would start feasibility study on the newly planned route from Dhaka to Comilla via Laksam. Besides, the study will assess the viability of the upgraded railway track for speedy train service.

The planning officer said they had sent a Tk 1.09-billion project proposal for conducting feasibility study and detailed design to the Planning Commission (PC) for approval.

"Simultaneously, we have been searching funds from foreign development partners for the main works of the proposed Dhaka-Chittagong railway track," Mr Huq said.

"Shortly after getting approval for the project from the PC, we will appoint consultant for beginning feasibility study and doing detailed design of the new route," the BR's planning officer said.

A PC official said they had received the BR project proposal. "Now we are scrutinising it."

Currently, the length of the Dhaka-Chittagong railway is 320.79kms as trains need to snake through the Dhaka-Tongi-Bhairab-Akhaura-Brahmanbaria-Comilla-Feni-Chittagong route.

Another BR official said if they could introduce the new route and upgrade the railway track for speedy trains, the journey time between Dhaka and Chittagong would come down to only two hours.

The official said the new railway line would not only help cut the journey time for the passengers but also ease the transportation of export and import cargoes between Dhaka and Chittagong.

Meanwhile, the BR has upgraded most portion of the 320kms Dhaka-Chittagong railway line into a double-track one from the existing single track with the financial support of the Asian Development Bank.

The state-run Railway has invested billions of US dollars over the last few years in upgrading its infrastructures and services for improving the internal transportation system as well as boarding Bangladesh onto the Trans-Asian Railway meant for continental journey.

ADB approves $1.5b loan for connecting Cox's Bazar by rail

FE Report

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) approved a US$1.5-billion loan to finance a fresh railway project connecting Bangladesh's tourist city of Cox's Bazar with neighbouring Myanmar. It also signed another credit deal for the sector.

An ADB statement said the Board of Directors of the Manila-based multilateral lender approved the single-biggest loan Wednesday in a meeting at its headquarters.

The government in April this year revised the struggling Dohazari-Ramu-Cox's Bazar and Ramu-to-Gundum single-line dual-gauge railway-construction project involving Tk 180.34 billion ($2.2 billion).

The ADB earlier had assured Bangladesh of bankrolling the rail project, struggling since 2010.

An Economic Relations Division (ERD) official said the Asian Bank would provide the $1.5 billion-worth of funds while the rest will be provided by the government from its own exchequer for the rail-line project.

The Bank said it would provide the loan in four tranches. It will further give $1.0 million in technical assistance to help Bangladesh Railway (BR) with safeguards, safety awareness, and procurement.

The lender said the new railway line, part of the Trans-Asia Railway network, will also improve access to Myanmar and beyond.

"The planned 102-kilometre stretch of railway will connect the tourist town of Cox's Bazar with the existing Bangladesh railway network," said Markus Roesner, Principal Transport Specialist with ADB's South Asia Department.

Under the project, the state-owned BR will construct the 102km rail line and nine stations between Dohazari and Cox's Bazar. The stations will integrate design features that are friendly to the elderly, women, children, and people with disabilities.

Meanwhile, the government on its own is rehabilitating the 47-kilometre rail section between Chittagong and Dohazari, a connection of the proposed railway track up to Cox's Bazar.

In the second phase, said the ADB in its statement Wednesday, it expects to enhance the capacity of the upcoming rail line and finance extensions to the Myanmar border and to the planned deep-sea port on Matarbari Island, north of Cox's Bazar.

Converting the Dhaka-Chittagong section of the railway to dual-gauge one will be financed under another ADB project, it said.

Meanwhile, the ADB and Bangladesh Wednesday signed a deal on another loan worth $200 million in Dhaka for procuring new train carriages, locomotives and other equipment for the BR.

Saifuddin Ahmed, ERD Joint Secretary, and Yoshinobu Tatewaki, Officer-in-Charge of Bangladesh Resident Mission of the ADB, inked the agreement at ERD in the capital.

Under the current Railway Rolling Stock Project, supported by further funds from the Government of Bangladesh, the ADB will finance purchase of about 250 passenger carriages, 10 locomotives, and state-of-the-art maintenance equipment. It will also provide training facilities for train drivers. The project aims to increase the number of train passengers by at least 10 per cent by 2021. It will also support government goal of increasing BR's transport market share from 4.0 per cent to 10 per cent for passengers.
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