Rampal and Shyamnagar show two climate futures for Bangladesh
As Parliament prepares to approve the FY2026-27 climate budget of more than Tk51,000 crore, attention is again focused on embankments, irrigation systems, climate-resilient agriculture and disaster management.
These are essential investments for a country on the frontline of climate change. But field visits to two coastal communities in the south-west — Rampal in Bagerhat and Shyamnagar in Satkhira — point to a deeper concern: Bangladesh may be financing adaptation, but not yet the full resilience architecture.
Both areas sit in the same coastal geography. Both face salinity intrusion, flooding, extreme heat and the erosion of livelihoods. Both are home to poor households where women and smallholder farmers carry the greatest burdens.
Yet beneath these shared risks lie two very different climate futures.
In Rampal, climate change is experienced as a daily accumulation of stress. Rising salinity has made drinking water scarce, forcing families to buy water from local markets. Livestock losses from heat stress are rising, while shrimp and fish farming are frequently disrupted by disease. Skin conditions linked to saline water are common, and households describe growing uncertainty over their livelihoods.
But the deeper challenge is social and institutional. Community organisation is fragmented, collective action is weak and awareness of available support systems remains limited. Many residents are unaware of climate services or technical tools that could support adaptation. Development interventions exist, but they remain disconnected from local realities and lack sustainability mechanisms.
Rampal reflects a form of vulnerability where exposure is high but collective capacity is weak.
Shyamnagar, by contrast, faces even more severe climate stress. Cyclones, tidal surges, salinity intrusion and sea-level rise have reshaped life. Freshwater scarcity is acute, with households making long and repeated journeys to collect drinking water. Fishing and agriculture have been heavily disrupted, forcing occupational change and deepening insecurity.
Yet despite higher exposure, Shyamnagar demonstrates stronger resilience.
Over decades of repeated shocks, communities have built dense systems of local knowledge and collective action. Adaptation practices such as rainwater harvesting, salt-tolerant crops, the Sorjan method, intercropping and homestead gardening are widely used and continuously refined. These are locally generated responses, not externally imposed solutions.
More importantly, communities mobilise collectively during crises. When embankments break or cyclones strike, households coordinate repairs, share materials and organise rapid response without waiting for external assistance. Local funds are often used for recovery.
This is not coping alone; it is organised adaptation.
Shyamnagar also shows stronger political engagement. Community groups have negotiated post-disaster recovery and infrastructure repair with authorities. Repeated exposure to crisis has produced institutional learning, social cohesion and adaptive governance.
The contrast reveals a key insight: resilience is not determined only by exposure to climate hazards. It is shaped by the capacity to organise, learn and act collectively.
This has major implications for Bangladesh's climate budget. The current approach prioritises physical infrastructure. Embankments, canals and agricultural investments are visible, measurable and necessary. But they represent only part of resilience.
What remains underfunded is adaptive capacity — the social and institutional systems that determine whether communities can respond effectively to shocks. These include local organisations, community networks and collective decision-making systems. Without them, even strong infrastructure becomes insufficient.
A feminist lens makes this gap clearer. In both Rampal and Shyamnagar, women are central to sustaining resilience through food systems, household stability and recovery processes. Yet these roles remain largely invisible in climate finance frameworks, which prioritise physical outputs over social processes.
Bangladesh's climate resilience is therefore not financed only through public spending or international finance. It is also sustained through social organisation and largely unrecognised collective and gendered labour that enables recovery at household and community levels.
This raises a central policy question: what kind of resilience is the climate budget actually funding?
If Bangladesh is serious about adaptation, three shifts are needed.
First, climate budgets must invest in adaptive capacity, not only infrastructure. This means strengthening community institutions, local organisations and social infrastructure alongside physical investments.
Second, policy must shift from top-down delivery to locally led adaptation, where communities such as Shyamnagar are recognised as co-producers of resilience rather than passive beneficiaries.
Third, climate finance must recognise the social foundations of resilience, including women's roles in sustaining recovery and collective action, which remain unaccounted for in budgeting systems.
An additional requirement is an evolving financing architecture. Public finance alone will not be sufficient. Adaptation at scale will require blended finance, including impact investment and structured partnerships with the private sector. Business engagement in resilient infrastructure, water systems, climate-smart agriculture and green livelihoods will be essential if Bangladesh is to close its adaptation gap.
The coastal reality offers a clear lesson. Resilience is not only about how much is spent. It is also about how societies are organised to respond to crisis, and how effectively different forms of finance are aligned towards that goal.
The difference between Rampal and Shyamnagar is not simply exposure. It is collective capacity, institutional strength and adaptive imagination.
Bangladesh's climate future will depend not only on embankments and canals, but also on whether climate policy recognises and invests in the social and financial systems that allow communities to act, adapt and transform in the face of uncertainty.
