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Govt's ability to raise power, energy prices bypassing BERC revoked

August 28, 2024 00:00:00


An ordinance has been issued revoking the provision for increasing the prices of oil, gas, and electricity by executive order, reports UNB.

On Tuesday, August 27, the President issued the "Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (Amendment) Ordinance, 2024."

Earlier, on August 22, the draft ordinance was approved in the interim government's advisory council meeting.

By amending the "Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission Act, 2003," the ordinance has abolished Section 34(k) which allowed for increasing the prices of oil, gas, and electricity by executive order.

On December 1, 2022, in a special case, the President issued the "Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (Amendment) Ordinance, 2022," giving the government, not the Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (BERC), the power to determine, readjust, and coordinate the prices of oil, electricity, and gas at the consumer level.

The ordinance included Section 34(k) under the heading of government power to determine, readjust, or coordinate tariffs. This section stated, "Notwithstanding anything in the other provisions of this law, in special cases, the government, by notification in the official gazette, for the purpose of subsidy adjustment, in the public interest, to ensure uninterrupted energy supply based on demand for agriculture, industry, fertilizers, trade, and household needs, may take prompt effective measures for the production increase, transmission, transportation, and marketing of energy, and may determine, readjust, or coordinate tariffs for electricity production, energy transmission, storage, marketing, supply, distribution, and at the consumer level."

Later, when the parliament convenes, the ordinance will become law. The ministry had been repeatedly increasing the prices of gas, electricity, and oil, which caused dissatisfaction among consumers.

On August 22, the advisory council meeting gave final approval for issuing the ordinance to repeal Section 34(k) of the "Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission Act, 2003," with the aim of ensuring greater public involvement, transparency, accountability, governance, public expectations, and consumer interests in tariff/price determination of electricity production, gas resources, and petroleum products through public hearings in the current context.

On August 5, the day of the 'March to Dhaka' program called by the anti-discrimination student movement, Sheikh Hasina resigned from the position of Prime Minister and moved to India.


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