LNG crisis exposes cost of cancelling 31 renewable projects
By now, around one third of these projects could have been generating electricity, reducing the impact of load shedding caused by impending LNG supply shortfall.
Qatar on Monday suspended its Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) production following attacks on key operating facilities by Iran.
This suspension means Bangladesh, which has a long-term agreement with Qatar to supply LNG, will not get its much-needed fuel in this lean season. As a result the country will face heavy load shedding, since a significant portion of its gas-based power generation will not have adequate supply.
Bangladesh is heavily dependent on imported fuels to meet its energy needs. It imports various fuel oil, coal, LNG, and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) worth around $5 billion annually because domestic gas and coal resources are very limited.
Lost opportunity
Bangladesh could have fared differently and better had the Yunus-led government not cancelled 31 renewable power projects totalling 3,300 megawatt capacity, mostly solar, with around 300MW wind and a small 25MW waste-to-energy project.
By now, around one third of these projects could have been generating electricity, reducing the impact of load shedding caused by impending LNG supply shortfall.
However, they were cancelled in September 2024, just one month after Muhammad Yunus assumed office. The government argued that these projects, signed under the Awami League through the controversial Quick Energy Supply (Special Provision) Act 2010, had not been awarded through competitive bidding.
The power tariffs under these projects ranged between 9.7 cents and 10.6 cents per kilowatt hour. The Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB) and the investors criticised the cancellation, and the government's decision was challenged at the High Court. The court ruled that the projects had been signed in good faith and could therefore be condoned with a review option.
With Letters of Intent (LoIs), the power companies had already purchased or were in the process of purchasing lands for their projects. Land acquisition is the most difficult part for any such ventures.
Costly mistake
When companies were expecting final agreements, the then-energy adviser Fouzul Kabir Khan pushed for the cancellation of all LoIs. The government subsequently floated fresh tenders for renewable projects totalling more than 5,000MW.
Although these tenders drew bids with lower tariffs at between 7 and 8 cents, the participation was weak, and the government secured deals for only about 900MW. If these bidders prove competent, their project may come online in 2028 or later but not before.
Cancelling the 31 deals was a costly mistake. Bangladesh remains far behind its renewable energy targets. The more energy it imports, the more vulnerable it becomes to global market volatility, geopolitical conflict, and foreign currency depletion. Building renewable capacity is essential for long-term energy security.
Renegotiation was better
Instead of outright cancellation, the Yunus government could have renegotiated the bids for these 31 projects.
Dozens of bidders told TBS in 2024 that the tariff offered by these solar projects ranges between 9.7 cents and 10.6 cents per kilowatt hour. These offers were made more than a year ago during which time solar modules price dropped by 20%. Since solar modules account for 35% of the project costs, the government could have renegotiated tariffs down by at least 1 cent and up to 1.5 cents bringing them into the 8-9 cents range.
The Yunus government also significantly reduced import duties on solar panels to 1% for the 2025-26 fiscal year to promote renewable energy. Additionally, a 10-year tax holiday (100% for 5 years, then 50% for 3, 25% for 2) is available for eligible renewable energy projects, with proposals to exempt VAT and stamp duty.
This prompted some of the cancelled bidders to offer even more cuts in their tariffs. But the government did not respond, a couple of bidders said.
Solar module prices decline almost every year globally. This was confirmed when the bids in 2025 under the Yunus government came in at 7-8 cents.
These 31 cancelled projects could have replaced $820 million worth of fossil fuel imports while providing direct jobs to 10,000 people.
Bangladesh had set a target of generating 15% of its electricity from renewable resources by 2030 and 40% by 2040. Yet, current achievements hover around just 3%.
Cancelling projects is easy because it requires doing nothing. But prudently executing them demands foresight, effort, and the intellectual capacity to secure the nation's future.
