
DHAKA : Bangladesh’s fiscal structure heavily favours
fossil fuels over renewable energy, artificially suppressing the
competitiveness of clean energy technologies and undermining the country’s
energy transition goals, the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) said on Sunday, reports UNB
Presenting the findings of a new study at a media briefing
at the CPD’s Dhanmondi office, its Research Director Dr Khondaker Golam Moazzem
said the country’s tax and tariff regime imposes far lower burdens on fossil
fuel imports than on technologies critical for integrating renewable energy
into the national grid.
“LNG imports face a total tax incidence of only 9.5
percent, with zero VAT and only 2 percent advance income tax while lithium-ion
batteries face 61.8 percent and electric vehicles face up to 93.16 percent,” he
said. “This is not a neutral tax structure. It is discriminatory, and it is
costing Bangladesh its energy future.”
The briefing, titled “Fiscal Discrimination between Fossil
Fuel and Renewable Energy: Alternate Solutions to Address the Energy Crisis,”
was presented by the CPD Power and Energy Study Team.
The study examined 50 energy-sector products across seven
technology categories: solar, wind, energy storage, electric vehicles, grid and
transmission infrastructure, fossil fuels, and fossil-fuel-based power
generation equipment, and calculated the Total Tax Incidence (TTI) for each
using National Board of Revenue’s tariff for FY2025-26.
It found that while solar and wind power generation
equipment face TTIs of around 28-31 percent, broadly comparable to fossil fuel
power generation machinery, the enabling technologies indispensable for
renewable integration face dramatically higher fiscal burdens. Grid
transformers are taxed at 61.8 to 93.16 percent, energy storage systems at 61.8
to 93.2 percent, and three-wheeled electric vehicles at 93.16 percent.
“Renewable generation equipment alone is not the primary
challenge,” the study noted. “The enabling technologies are.”
Advance tax at 7.5 percent and high Customs Duty of up to
25 percent are the principal drivers of the elevated burden on clean energy
technologies. In contrast, LNG products such as propane, butane, and natural
gas in liquefied form carry zero VAT and only 2 percent Advance Income Tax,
making them among the most fiscally privileged imports in the entire energy
sector.
Through a revenue foregone analysis, CPD estimated that
the preferential fiscal treatment of LNG is causing NBR to forego at least Tk
1,059 crore to Tk 1,293 crore annually compared to what would be collected if
wind or solar-equivalent tax rates were applied.
For coal, the foregone revenue ranges between Tk 241 crore
and Tk 664 crore. A separate fiscal incentive analysis found that LNG importers
are receiving financial benefits worth approximately Tk 1,672 crore solely from
full VAT exemption, a privilege not extended to solar or wind businesses.
The study’s producer subsidy analysis, based on Bangladesh
Power Development Board plant-wise electricity purchase data for FY2024-25,
revealed that the average subsidy for oil-based power generation stands at Tk
20.18 per kilowatt-hour, the highest among all fuel types, while the average
subsidy across all fossil fuel plants is Tk 7.48 per kWh. Renewable energy
plants receive an average subsidy of Tk 8.93 per kWh.
Oil-based plants receive both capacity payments and high
fuel cost support, with some plants such as United-Anowara (300MW) receiving a
per-unit subsidy gap of Tk 39 per kWh. Renewable energy plants, by contrast,
receive no capacity payments and carry high upfront capital costs, partly
driven by elevated import taxes on solar equipment and batteries.
The discriminatory fiscal stance is mirrored in public
spending. CPD found that fossil fuel-based projects account for 87 percent of
the total power and energy sector project budget and 79 percent of the revised FY2026
ADP allocation.
Renewable energy projects, by contrast, receive only 3
percent of the total PE project budget and 4.6 percent of the revised
allocation.
The FY2025-26 budget provided no new incentives for solar
or other renewable energy technologies and omitted the Tk 100 crore allocation
for renewables that had been included the previous year.
“From FY16 through RFY26, fossil fuel-based projects have
consistently absorbed more than 90 percent of the power and energy development
allocation,” the study noted. “This structural bias has persisted despite
repeated clean energy pledges.”
CPD put forward a series of fiscal reforms, urging the
government to act in the upcoming budget cycle:
The think tank called for immediate removal of the 7.5
percent Advance Tax on solar and wind equipment, reduction of Customs Duty on
lithium-ion batteries from 25 percent to 5 percent, and elimination of the 20
percent Supplementary Duty on energy storage batteries.
It also recommended reducing Customs Duty on grid
infrastructure components, including transformers, conductors, and transmission
towers from 25 percent to 5 percent, and eliminating the Supplementary Duty on
medium-sized transformers and low-voltage conductors.
On fossil fuels, CPD called for the full withdrawal of VAT
exemption on LNG imports, restoring the standard 15 percent rate, and an end to
capacity payments for fossil fuel-based power plants.
It also urged the government to introduce dedicated green
subsidies and grants for energy transition in the FY2026-27 budget, increase
ADP allocations for renewable energy and grid modernisation, and pursue
climate-responsive budgeting across the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of
Power, Energy and Mineral Resources.
“The current fiscal framework creates a disconnect between Bangladesh’s renewable energy ambitions and the incentives embedded in the tax system,” Moazzem said. “Strategic reforms targeting advance tax, regulatory duty, and selected customs duties could reduce transition costs while improving policy coherence.”