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ENERGY
Introduction
Energy
is essential for promoting living standards. It is a pre-requisite for
economic growth and technological progress. In Bangladesh, per capita
generation of electricity in 1995 was only 92 kwh which is lower in
comparison to that in neighbouring countries. In view of the
prevailing low generation and consumption of energy, efforts should be
made to develop this sector in such a way that the needs of all
sectors can be met adequately, efficiently and economically.
Electricity
demand grew at an average rate of 11 per cent per annum during
1972-94; per capita generation increased from 15.6 kwh in 1973 to 92
kwh in 1995. Notwithstanding, the progress made to date, only about 15
per cent population have access to electricity.
Review
of Past Development
During
the War of Liberation, power installations suffered extensive damage.
As a result, at the worst case, peak demand dropped to 30 MW from the
pre-liberation level of 225 MW. So, after independence the immediate
problem was rehabilitation of power supply. By the end of 1972-73, a
rehabilitation and development programme was undertaken in the First
Five Year Plan. However, because of the shortage of fund the programme
was carried over to the Two Year Plan. Several projects, initiated
before the Liberation War were completed and a number of new projects
were undertaken during the periods. As a result, installed generation
capacity increased to 822 MW from 545 MW, while the peak demand rose
to 462 MW from 222 MW.
To
reduce the gap between demand and generation capacity, the Second Plan
undertook a rapid expansion programme. The most important achievement
during this period was the construction of the East-West electrical
inter-connector which enabled the transfer of gas-based low cost power
from the east to the west. Five power generation plants having a total
installed capacity of 330 MW were completed during this period. But
generation capacity still lagged behind the demand. The main
constraint to the expansion of power supply was shortfall of resources
coupled with a huge system loss and a slow response to tariff
adjustment against rising fuel cost. By the end of the Second Plan,
the system loss stood at 37.5 per cent. An investment programme of Tk.
14,370 million at 1979/80 prices was undertaken. The actual investment
was Tk. 20,970 million at current prices. The Second Plan also pursued
a policy of substituting imported fuel by natural gas. A significant
progress was made in this direction. By the end of 1984/85, total
number of electricity consumers stood at about 964,000 compared with
522,000. Table shows the progress of power development in the country
.
Overview
of Fourth Plan
Ensuring
supply ahead of demand is the ideal situation in case of electricity
for meeting manufacturing, irrigation, commercial and domestic needs
of any economy. However, it was not possible to do so in Bangladesh.
Against a peak demand of 1640 MW in 1990/91 and 1970 MW in 1994/95,
the installed capacity was only 2352 MW and 2908 MW respectively. The
operational capacity (2133 MW) was again interrupted by occasional
power outages owing to fluctuations in gas pressure, transmission and
distribution faults. These caused enormous losses to industrial
production and commercial activities. Irrigation suffered relatively
less due to its use of diesel power and electricity supplied by REB in
off-peak hours.
Electricity
generation, transmission and distribution require large financial
investment. Although Bangladesh has considerable gas reserve and
promising potentials, due to high system loss, large account
receivables, poor management and inability to rationalise tariff rate
and introduce other reforms, concessional loan for the power sector
from the multilateral development partners was not available in the
Fourth Plan period. Consequently, needed investments for generation,
transmission and distribution of electricity could not be made during
1990-95. Hard term suppliers' credit and inadequate government
resources made it possible to add only about 581 MW of generation
capacity in the following power plants during the Fourth Plan Period:
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a.
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Raozan
(Chittagong) Power Plant (1st unit)
|
210
MW
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b.
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Sylhet
Combined Cycle Power Plant
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90
MW
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c.
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Baghabari
Power Plant
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71
MW
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d.
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Ghorashal
Power Plant (5th unit)
|
210
MW
|
However,
due to non-completion of scheduled rehabilitation of some power
stations, generation capability decreased by 271 MW and about 11 MW
capability was retired during the period. The net capacity increase
was thus 299 MW. In addition, reduced gas supply caused shut-down of
some power stations resulting in lower operational supply of
electricity. 
Organisational
changes were made in the area of transmission and distribution of
power in the country with BPDB entrusted with generation, transmission
and distribution in urban areas, DESA with distribution of electricity
in the greater Dhaka area and REB with distribution in the rural
areas. Power generation and distribution was opened to both local and
foreign private investments. To this end, a Power Cell was created to
facilitate private sector investment in electricity production and
distribution. A Rural Power Company (RPC) was set up for generation
and supply of power exclusively to the REB. Concrete results of these
measures are expected during the Fifth Plan period.
Fourth
Plan Targets and Achievements
The
Fourth Plan was formulated with a public sector allocation of Tk.
64,500 million at 1989/90 prices for the power sector. This allocation
was inadequate in relation to the physical targets set in the Plan
document. Due to shortage of both local and external resources, the
Plan allocation as well as Plan targets had to be revised. The revised
allocation was Tk. 45,360 million at 1989/90 constant prices against
which Tk. 67,480 million was spent at current prices. Major targets as
well as the achievements during the Plan period are shown in Table
Targets
and Achievements of Power Sector During Fourth Plan
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Agency
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Particulars
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Actual
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Fourth
Plan
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Achievement
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Position
in 1989/90
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Target
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New
Addition during Fourth Plan (1990-95)
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Cumulative
Position in(1994-95)
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BPDB
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Installed
Capacity (MW)
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2,352
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2,878
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581
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*2,908
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|
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Capability
(MW)
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1,834
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2,743
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581
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**2,133
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Transmission
line (km)230kv,132 kv, & 66 kv
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2,503
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3,151
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552
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3,055
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Grid
Substation capacity (MVA) 230kv, 132kv & 66kv
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4,150
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2,621
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2,369
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6,519
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Distribution
line km (33 kv & below)
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30,256
(Excluding DESA)
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36,734
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4,437
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34,693
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Consumer
connection (No.)
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850,438
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1,050,000
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225,296
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1,075,734
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REB
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Distribution
line km
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35,333
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61,188
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29,853
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65,186
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Electrified
village (Number)
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8,545
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14,530
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7,939
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16,484
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Consumer
connection (No.)
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495,565
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962,962
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679,006
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1,174,571
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DESA
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Transmission
line (km) 132kv
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221
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-
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104
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325
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Grid
Substation Capacity (MVA)
|
433
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-
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874
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1,307
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Distribution
line km
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5,511
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6,765
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1,995
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7,506
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Consumer
connection (No.)
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324,134
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570,000
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192,326
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516,460
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*
2352 MW+581 MW new - 25 MW retired/standby = 2908 MW
**
1834 MW+581 MW new - 11 MW retired - 271 MW derated/decrease for
maintenance & rehabilitation = 2133 MW
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