Promoting Peace and Progress
Wednesday, 5th of February 2025
The adoption of United Nations General Assembly Resolution “Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”, the adoption of the Addis Ababa Action Agenda on “Financing for Development”; the adoption of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction and the Adoption of the Paris Agreement by the Conference of the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) are indicating that Global Development Paradigm has started a transformational journey involving all the countries of the world including Bangladesh towards Sustainable Climate Resilient Low-Carbon Pathway. The Paris Agreement urges all nations to undertake progressively ambitious efforts towards a low carbon future through “Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)”. The Article 2 of the Paris Agreement calls for a paradigm shift of the economic development away from its dependency on fossil fuels and energy intensive systems both at global and national level. A Sustainable Climate Resilient Low-Carbon Development Pathway is anticipated to guide the policy regime for the gradual transformation of the existing carbon dependent social-economic development paradigm 'til 2030. |
100% Renewable Energy in Bangladesh by 2050 is technically feasible, economically viable and socially beneficial. The study suggests that renewable energy can tackle both the challenges of economic expansion and reliable energy access, if the energy strategy of Bangladesh takes an integrated approach across heat, mobility and electricity. The study also highlights that Bangladesh has the technical possibilities to implement new innovative technologies such as floating RE installations and to reduce its future dependence on energy imports significantly. The study also recommends to use the existing Solar Home System (SHS) to develop bottom-up electrification model. |
Bangladesh has almost 6,250 km2 of available land for PV where 156 GW of solar power can potentially be harvested through utility scale solar farms. 20% of these utility scale solar farms would be floating installations. This is a summary for policy makers of the 100% Renewable Energy for Bangladesh – a study conducted by Bread for the World Germany (BFTW), Coastal Development Partnership (CDP), University of Technology Sydney (UTS) and World Future Council (WFC). |
Since: 01 April, 2013