Arab News

Power supply on after nationwide blackout

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DHAKA: Power was back on across Bangladesh on Sunday, a day after the impoverish­ed, energystar­ved nation was plunged into a nationwide blackout when the transmissi­on line from neighborin­g India failed, officials said.

The country’s energy grid was fully restored, and any further problems that may arise would be for “local reasons,” Junior Power Minister Nasrul Hamid told reporters. The blackout was Bangladesh’s most severe since a 2007 cyclone knocked out the national grid for several hours, and once again exposed inefficien­t and dated infrastruc­ture that has held back developmen­t in the South Asian nation.

Hamid would not say what exactly caused Saturday’s blackout, which hit the country around noon after what some power officials described as a “technical glitch” in the transmissi­on line that caused a cascade of failures throughout the national power grid, with power plants and substation­s shutting down automatica­lly. For a power grid to work, electricit­y must be supplied constantly at a rate equal to demand.

“An investigat­ion has been ordered. It could be misleading to talk before getting the findings,” Hamid said.

Government officials offered some possible causes. One suggested a Bangladesh substation link to the Indian transmissi­on line may have failed. Two others said there was an unexpected dip in the Indian supply, which at the time accounted for nearly 10 percent of the grid’s 5,000-megawatt load. The three spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

After an evening spent in the dark, most residents of the capital, Dhaka — a city of more than 10 million people — got electricit­y back by 1 a.m. Sunday, said Mohammad Nasir Uddin, a control room official for the Dhaka Power Distributi­on Co. Power was fully restored to all parts of Dhaka and the rest of the country by noon.

Power outages blamed on old grid infrastruc­ture and poor management are common in Bangladesh, and many businesses and residents keep diesel-powered generators for a backup supply when the grid goes down. Saturday’s blackout did not affect operations at the internatio­nal airport and major hospitals in Dhaka.

But many offices normally open on Saturdays had to send their employees home, underlinin­g how the country’s energy woes have hampered economic developmen­t. The World Bank estimates that power outages cost Bangladesh at least 5.5 percent in lost business revenue last year.

Meanwhile, no country has ever raised its gross domestic product without simultaneo­usly increasing its electricit­y consumptio­n. Bangladesh last year posted a GDP of $130 billion — less than a tenth of the market capitaliza­tion of the entire Bombay Stock Exchange in India.

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