Bangladesh is facing a looming fertilizer crisis as three state-owned factories are currently out of production due to a gas shortage. The Bangladesh Chemical Industries Corporation (BCIC) is urgently requesting gas from the industries ministry to resume production at two of the closed factories. This crisis jeopardizes the target of producing 10 lakh tonnes of urea locally this fiscal year 2023-2024, with a significant production deficit. To mitigate the crisis, BCIC plans to import 2 lakh tonnes of fertilizer through tenders, but doubts exist regarding feasibility amidst the dollar crisis, especially during the critical boro season for rice production in January-February.
The BCIC emphasizes that reopening factories is the only solution and aims to ensure an additional 2 lakh tonnes of urea fertiliser during the peak season by restarting two factories. Currently, only one factory is in production, supplying 1,400 tonnes daily. Additionally, efforts to import 90,000 tonnes of fertiliser under G2G arrangements are underway. Delays in subsidy disbursement have raised concerns about import payments and potential disruptions in fertiliser imports.