
AN INCREASE of 33 per cent in prices of gas for use as raw materials and captive power in the industrial sector that the Energy Regulatory Commission announced on April 13 with an immediate effect is worrying for industries that plan to get new connections or expand their consumption. The plan is discriminatory. The increase will force factories seeking to use gas for captive power generation to pay Tk 42 a unit in place of Tk 31.50. Old captive power producers seeking to use more gas to increase their present capacity would need to pay keeping to the new rates. The industries that would seek new connections would need to pay Tk 40 a unit instead of the previous Tk 30. The existing industries seeking to increase consumption would need to pay at the new rate for the additional supply. The industries in the process of getting new connections would need to pay for a half of the sanctioned limit at new rates and for the other half at the previous rate.
But for Petrobangla which proposed a 152 per cent increase in gas prices aimed at generating Tk 32.4 billion, all other stakeholders at the public hearing on February 26 expressed their strong disapproval, noting that the interim government was following in the footsteps of the Awami League government, which was overthrown in a mass uprising in August 2024 that flared up from protests against discrimination in civil service recruitment in July that year. The stakeholders who attended the hearing were surprised at the commission’s convening the public hearing on grounds of reducing deficits of public companies. Whilst the government remains unwilling to improve the efficiency of the agency and end corruption and irregularities in the process, industrialists have earlier noted that it appears something like resolving the issue by arbitrarily increasing prices. And, industrialists, who at the time of the public hearing said that such a government move would increase production costs that would eventually fall on consumers, add another reason to their argument against gas price increase, saying that the price increase for new and old industrial gas connections and for the use of gas for captive power would discourage fresh investments, especially at a time when the government is trying to attract investments. Businesspeople say that a profit-first mentality has driven the government move, but it benefits neither consumers nor industries.
The government should dispense with the discrimination in the gas price plan. But, it had better not increase gas prices at such a time and, first, put in some efforts to improve efficiency and end corruption in the agencies involved and the process before going for gas price increase.