Beyond megawatts: What the FY2026–27 budget means for Bangladesh’s power sector
As Bangladesh moves past rapid capacity expansion, the focus shifts to financial sustainability, system efficiency, and a more resilient energy mix
Bangladesh's power and energy sector has entered a new phase. After more than a decade of rapid capacity expansion, the central challenge is no longer adding megawatts, it is ensuring that electricity remains reliable, affordable, and financially sustainable while supporting a gradual energy transition. The FY2026–27 budget reflects this shift.
The government's allocation of Tk 17,345 crore to the sector underscores its continued strategic importance, but the more significant story lies in evolving policy priorities that emphasise efficiency, cost management, and system optimisation.
Installed power generation capacity in Bangladesh has grown to over 28,000 MW, a remarkable achievement that has enabled near-universal access and supported economic growth. Yet high reserve margins and rising system costs now point to a structural transition. The sector must move from expansion to consolidation.
Financial sustainability remains the defining challenge. Heavy reliance on imported fuels, particularly LNG, has exposed the sector to global price volatility and foreign exchange pressures. Combined with capacity payments and tariff gaps, these factors have contributed to mounting subsidy burdens and fiscal stress.
Encouragingly, the budget signals greater attention to efficiency. Measures such as phasing out inefficient plants, applying least-cost planning principles, and reviewing existing contractual arrangements while maintaining investor confidence and market predictability indicate a shift toward optimization and value for money.
Infrastructure development remains critical. Bangladesh aims to increase generation capacity to around 35,000 MW by 2030 and expand its transmission network to roughly 25,000 circuit kilometers. A stronger grid will be essential to improve reliability and integrate new generation sources.
Fuel diversification is also becoming more prominent. The Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant, with a planned capacity of approximately 2,400 MW, may contribute to diversification of the generation mix and strengthening energy security.
At the same time, renewable energy occupies an increasingly important place in the budget's policy direction. The government's continued emphasis on scaling up renewable energy supported by targets such as achieving a 20% share of electricity generation by 2030 signals an intention to gradually reduce reliance on imported fuels and strengthen long-term energy resilience (Government of Bangladesh, Budget Speech FY2026–27, 2026, p. 68).
These measures, if effectively implemented, could help moderate generation costs over time, reduce exposure to global fuel price volatility, and contribute to improved environmental outcomes.
However, the budget also highlights the structural challenges underlying this transition. Expanding renewable energy at scale will require significant upfront investment in transmission infrastructure, grid flexibility, and system balancing capabilities. It may also increase short-term integration costs, necessitating stronger planning, improved procurement frameworks, and institutional capacity.
The direction of travel is therefore clear: greater renewable penetration will reshape the sector's cost structure, investment needs, and operational requirements. How effectively these changes are managed will determine whether renewable energy contributes to both affordability and sustainability.
The push for domestic energy resource development also reflects a broader strategy to enhance energy security. Planned exploration activities could help reduce import dependence over time, though results will take time to materialize.
Perhaps the most critical gap lies in financing. While the budget sets out ambitious targets, it provides limited clarity on funding strategies. Delivering on these priorities will require a combination of public investment, state-owned enterprise financing, private participation, and support from development partners.
Ultimately, the sector's success will depend on execution. Institutional capacity, governance, and project delivery will determine whether policy intentions translate into tangible outcomes.
The FY2026–27 budget marks a turning point. Bangladesh's energy sector must now evolve beyond capacity expansion toward a model grounded in efficiency, financial discipline, and sustainability.
Muniyat Fabbiha is an energy sector professional working on infrastructure and energy development issues. She writes in her personal capacity.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and views of The Business Standard.
