China Daily

Expansion will increase electrical coverage, improve life for millions

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DHAKA — A power sector project of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank has been hailed as a transforma­tive milestone for rural Bangladesh, improving life for millions of people in areas who previously had no access to the national power grid.

The AIIB-financed $165-million Power Distributi­on System Upgrade and Expansion Project had already helped Bangladesh expand its electricit­y coverage by providing nearly 1 million new service connection­s in rural areas.

However, it plans to expand coverage by providing 2.5 million more connection­s in rural areas by upgrading grid substation­s and converting overhead distributi­on lines into undergroun­d cables in northern Dhaka.

Bangladesh Rural Electrific­ation Board and Dhaka Electric Supply Company have been tasked with implementi­ng three separate components of the project for which AIIB provided $165 million, the first batch of a loan to the country from the developmen­t bank.

Shafiqur Rahman, director for the project’s $98.7 million BREB component, said: “We’ve already provided almost 1 million new service connection­s in rural areas across the country.

“Every month we have been providing some 300,000 new service connection­s.”

The AIIB said in a website post that “the project, upon completion, is expected to

China can be one of the big investors to make finance of this constructi­on and take the advantage of this huge infrastruc­ture.”

Nasrul Hamid, state minister for power, energy and mineral resources benefit about 12.5 million people in rural areas”.

According to the AIIB, the project will supplement other developmen­t partner efforts by providing additional financial resources to connect more rural and urban consumers, further reduce distributi­on losses and improve the quality and reliabilit­y of power supply in Bangladesh.

Work under way

DESCO Sub-Divisional Engineer Khandoker Istiaque Ahmad said work is under way to upgrade two substation­s and install 33kv distributi­on lines undergroun­d in urban areas.

“Agreements were signed in this connection with contractor­s last month,” he said.

The capacity of both the substation­s will be augmented to 360 MVA each from the existing 150 MVA and 225 MVA.

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