BANGLADESH is considering staggered holidays for garment manufacturers to tackle a worsening power crunch caused by fuel shortages, reports Bloomberg.
The proposal involves asking factories to choose different days off instead of all of them remaining closed only on Friday, said Energy Minister Nasrul Hamid.
'We sat down with business leaders and they agreed to our proposal in principle,' he said.
The system of rolling holidays for different industrial areas is expected to reduce pressure on electricity demand as well as fuel oils for public transport, Mr Hamid said.
The South Asian nation, also the world's No 2 garments exporter after China, has resorted to power cuts to preserve fuel reserves amid war-induced energy price shocks, and separately approached multilateral lenders including the International Monetary Fund for loans to shore up its foreign reserves as import bills balloon.
The proposed measure will save as much as 550 megawatts of electricity a day at a time when power cuts stretched beyond the original schedule for one hour to at least three hours in some areas.
The government recently announced as much as a 52 per cent rise fuel oil prices, a record jump for the nation, sparking street protests. Shortly after, transport operators increased bus fares, adding to public discontent.
The power crisis was made worse after volatile global prices forced bangladesh out of the spot market for liquefied natural gas cargoes, said Mr Hamid. The government stopped buying spot LNG cargo in June.
SeaNews Turkey
The proposal involves asking factories to choose different days off instead of all of them remaining closed only on Friday, said Energy Minister Nasrul Hamid.
'We sat down with business leaders and they agreed to our proposal in principle,' he said.
The system of rolling holidays for different industrial areas is expected to reduce pressure on electricity demand as well as fuel oils for public transport, Mr Hamid said.
The South Asian nation, also the world's No 2 garments exporter after China, has resorted to power cuts to preserve fuel reserves amid war-induced energy price shocks, and separately approached multilateral lenders including the International Monetary Fund for loans to shore up its foreign reserves as import bills balloon.
The proposed measure will save as much as 550 megawatts of electricity a day at a time when power cuts stretched beyond the original schedule for one hour to at least three hours in some areas.
The government recently announced as much as a 52 per cent rise fuel oil prices, a record jump for the nation, sparking street protests. Shortly after, transport operators increased bus fares, adding to public discontent.
The power crisis was made worse after volatile global prices forced bangladesh out of the spot market for liquefied natural gas cargoes, said Mr Hamid. The government stopped buying spot LNG cargo in June.
SeaNews Turkey