Bangladesh’s energy sector faces a “perfect storm” of global shocks and domestic inefficiencies, adding $760-830 million in monthly import costs in early 2026, according to Lion City Advisory Research.
Their report, Bangladesh Energy Sector: Crisis, Cost & Transition, warns that rising global fuel prices following the Iran-Israel conflict have pushed the country toward a “fiscal emergency.” Brent crude surged to $105 per barrel in four weeks, while spot LNG prices jumped 125% to $22.51 per MMBtu.
Power sector inefficiencies, especially at the Bangladesh Power Development Board (BPDB), exacerbate the crisis. Installed capacity has grown fivefold to 28,919 MW since 2006, yet nearly 63% remains idle, generating annual capacity payments of Tk38,000 crore.
Blended generation costs now range Tk18-22 per kWh, more than doubling monthly subsidy needs to Tk7,500-9,500 crore.
The “Bapex Paradox” highlights domestic gas underperformance: only eight of 34 planned wells were drilled in FY2025, increasing reliance on costly LNG. Each additional 10 million cubic feet/day of domestic gas could save $82 million annually. Industrial energy efficiency could yield 50 bcf of “free LNG,” replicating 13-27 new wells.
Renewable energy is more cost-effective: recent utility-scale solar bids stand at 8.27 US cents/kWh (Tk9.09), far below diesel (Tk32.53) or heavy fuel oil (Tk26). Policy uncertainty, including the IA framework cancellation, stalls private investment and 5,200MW of solar projects.
The report advocates the Bangladesh Energy Independence Program (BEIP): solar expansion, diesel replacement, and industrial efficiency to achieve 60-70% renewables by 2040 and potentially export $500 million-$1 billion annually. “At $105 oil per barrel, Bangladesh cannot afford not to transition,” the report concludes.
