The government has resumed importing LNG (liquefied natural gas) from the international spot market.
According to official sources, the Cabinet Committee on Government Purchase (CCGP) approved a proposal of the state-owned Petrobangla to import one cargo of LNG.
Agriculture Minister Abdur Razzaque presided over the meeting held virtually on Wednesday.
The government had earlier suspended the import of LNG from the international spot market in July 2022 following the excessive hike in prices of the gas against the backdrop of the Russia-Ukraine war.
Earlier, Bangladesh was purchasing LNG from the spot market between $6-10 per MMBtu. After the start of the war in February this year, the price crossed $37 per MMBtu.
Official sources said the Energy and Mineral Resources Division placed the proposal on behalf of its subordinate body Petrobangla to import the LNG.
“The price of LNG was quoted at $19.78 per MMBTu (Million British Thermal unit) and the cost of the total consignment was set at Tk850 crore,” said a source at the Energy and Mineral Resources Division.
He noted that the government has planned to import a total of 12 LNG cargos in 2023 to meet the growing demand for natural gas.
As part of the austerity measures, the government last year suspended power generation from diesel-fired power plants and also import of the LNG as the prices of the products went too high.
As a result, the government was incurring a huge financial loss in importing LNG at higher prices and selling it to the local market at lower prices.
But recently, the government raised the gas prices at retail level for power plants, industries, and commercial users to reduce subsidies in the sector as per advice of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to get a loan from the multilateral lending agency.
As per the recent announcement, the retail price of gas was raised by 14.5% to 178.9% for industries, power plants and commercial establishments, who together account for 78% of gas use in Bangladesh while price of gas for captive power plants and industries, gas was raised to Tk30 per cubic metre.
This would be a 150% hike for large industries, 154.7% for medium industries and 178.3% for small and cottage industries. For captive power plants, it would be an increase of 87.5%.
Commercial establishments like hotels and restaurants will have to pay Tk30.50 per unit, up 14.5% from the existing rate.
The tariff for households, fertiliser production, CNG-run vehicles and tea gardens will remain unchanged.
The country produces about 2,300 million cubic feet per day (MMCFD) gas from local gas fields to meet a demand of over 2,800MMCFD leaving a gap of 500MMCFD.
To meet this gas the government has to import a huge LNG from abroad of which it meets 350MMCFD gas through importing it from Qatar and Oman under long-term agreements while remaining 150MMCFD is being imported from the international spot market.