Gas Crisis Forces Bangladesh's $27.9B Garment Sector to 30-40% Capacity

Sunita Somvanshi

Gas pressures at 1–2 PSI are crippling garment lines built for 10 PSI—capacity falls to 30–40%.

Photo Source: Bitjungle (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Daily deficits near 1,000 mmcfd with demand at 3,800 mmcfd vs. 2,800 mmcfd domestic supply.

Photo Source: ILO in Asia  (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

System losses of 13% bleed millions—each 1% cut saves Taka 1,000 crore.

Photo Source: Hervé Cozanet (CC BY-SA 3.0)

A $350 M World Bank LC guarantee helps import LNG—faster letters of credit.

Photo Credits: Ajay Suresh (CC BY 2.0)

Spot-market cargos at $14–15/MMBtu mean Taka 675–690 crore per shipment.

Photo Credits: Ken Hodge (CC BY 2.0)

Prepayment consortia could secure dedicated gas volumes for factories.

Photo Credits: Yan Krukau (Pexels)

FSRUs at Payra & Moheshkhali (500–1,000 mmcfd each) promise interim relief.

Photo Source: Pxhere (CC0)

A 7.5 mtpa onshore terminal at Matarbari anchors long-term imports.

Photo Credits: Jan Arrhénborg (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Bids for 24 Bay of Bengal blocks and 100 new wells by 2028 could boost domestic output.

Photo Credits: Aron Razif (Pexels)

Efficiency upgrades, solar PV & smart scheduling optimize scarce gas.

Photo Credits: Trinh Trần (Pexels)

Trade pressures rise as U.S. tariffs loom—90 days to stabilize supply or risk orders shifting.

Photo Source: Wolfgang Weiser (Pexels)

A balanced energy portfolio woven stitch by stitch can secure Bangladesh’s RMG future.

Photo Source: T6 Adventures (Pexels)