An untapped tool: Why Bangladesh must fix its SDG Tracker before COP31
At the World Economic Forum's Summer Davos 2026 in Dalian recently, Prime Minister Tarique Rahman pressed Bangladesh's case before the world – operationalise the Loss and Damage Fund, render climate finance genuinely accessible, and accord adaptation parity with mitigation.
He noted that the $300 billion New Collective Quantified Goal falls short of what developing nations actually require.
It was a forceful, well-calibrated appeal and one that presupposes the world will take Bangladesh's own accounting of its losses at face value.
That presupposition cuts both ways. A nation that asks the international community to quantify its loss and damage must first demonstrate it can quantify them domestically, transparently, and in real time.
On this count, Bangladesh possesses precisely the instrument required and has, for years, allowed it to fall short of its mandate.
An UN-launched platform, now underperforming its own ambition
In 2017, Bangladesh did something few nations had attempted. It built a dedicated, government-wide digital infrastructure to monitor its progress against the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, launching the platform at the UN General Assembly itself.
The SDG Tracker (sdg.gov.bd) was developed by the Access to Information (a2i) programme under the Prime Minister's Office, with technical and financial backing from UNDP and USAID, making Bangladesh the first country in the world to field a purpose-built national SDG progress monitoring platform.
The Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics now authenticates the data ministries submit to it and the General Economics Division of the Planning Commission helps coordinate it.
It was upgraded in March 2025 with promises of live analysis and easier public access. This was never a minor administrative tool, it was conceived as a flagship instrument of evidence-based governance, built in partnership with the UN's own development apparatus, and held up internationally as proof that Bangladesh intended to govern by data rather than declaration.
That pedigree is precisely why its present condition under SDG 13, Climate Action is so consequential.
The tracker lists seven indicators under this goal. Two carry a baseline but no updated figures since the proportion of local governments implementing disaster risk reduction strategies, with due data outstanding since 2021 through 2024, and total greenhouse gas emissions per year, similarly stalled.
Even the indicators marked "updated" mostly plateau at 2024 figures. These are not peripheral metrics.
Disaster risk reduction tells us whether resilience financing is reaching the floodplains and cyclone belts where it is most needed; emissions data tells us whether climate policy is tethered to the actual economy.
A platform engineered, with UN partnership, to deliver exactly this kind of evidence is instead delivering silence where the evidence should be loudest. A flawed instrument can misguide policy and steer diplomacy in the wrong direction.
The asymmetry is instructive. A World Bank study, reported by Reuters (2025), found that extreme heat cost Bangladesh up to $1.78 billion in 2024, roughly 0.4% of GDP, through health impacts and diminished productivity.
That figure exists because a dedicated research effort was mobilised to produce it. It throws into relief how much of the remainder of the climate picture goes uncounted, not for want of damage, but for want of the unglamorous, recurring labour of keeping a public dashboard current.
Bangladesh's own 2025 Voluntary National Review concedes as much the tracker is intended to enable real-time monitoring, yet standardisation, data quality, and accessibility remain unresolved. That is a candid admission from the government itself, and it deserves to be treated as a mandate for reform rather than a footnote.
The diplomatic stakes
This is not merely a matter of domestic bookkeeping. Bangladesh's standing at COP31 in Antalya, Turkey this November rests substantially on its moral authority as a frontline state.
That authority is most persuasive when corroborated by demonstrable, verifiable evidence: when the prime minister tells assembled world leaders that Bangladesh's losses are real and escalating, climate envoys and donor institutions ought to be able to substantiate that claim against Bangladesh's own published data, not merely take it on faith, nor stumble upon a dashboard several years out of date when they look.
A flagship platform, conceived with UN partnership and launched on a UN stage, ought not be the weakest link in Bangladesh's own argument. Rather, an updated own tracker would strongly support Bangladesh's claims as a frontline country.
Genuine reform required
The remedy is not a more colourful interface. It demands accountability with consequences. Ministries responsible for SDG indicators should face binding submission deadlines, with named officials accountable and answerable for delays and public, written justifications when data lapses and compliance ought to be woven into annual performance reviews, not held apart from them.
Equally, reform should not be confined to the bureaucracy. The tracker's legitimacy should be considerably strengthened by a participatory layer; structured mechanisms through which community members, local government bodies, and civil society organisations can contribute ground-level observations on disaster preparedness, local emissions sources, climate displacement, and non-economic losses and damages that ministries alone may not capture or report on schedule.
A model of community-based reporting, with local data validated and cross-checked by district and sub-district level institutions, would not only fill present gaps but render the tracker accountable to the very citizens whose lives the underlying numbers describe, rather than to ministries alone.
A tracker that fails to track is not a transparency mechanism; it is a missed argument at the very moment Bangladesh needs every argument available.
Bangladesh is entitled to demand that the world reckon with its climate losses. But that demand becomes stronger only when it is backed by credible, current and publicly accessible national evidence.
Without reliable data, the SDG Tracker risks becoming more than an incomplete dashboard.
It becomes a liability or a burden.
Shakib Alam Prithul is a climate activist and development professional. He can be reached at sakibalam5@gmail.com
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.
