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Bangladesh Today

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/20/world/asia/20bangla.html?ref=world


In Silt, Bangladesh Sees Potential Shield Against Sea Level Rise


BEEL BHAINA, Bangladesh — The rivers that course down from the Himalayas and into this crowded delta bring an annual tide of gift and curse. They flood low-lying paddies for several months, sometimes years, at a time. And they ferry mountains of silt and sand from far away upstream.

Most of that sediment washes out into the roiling Bay of Bengal. But an accidental discovery by desperate delta folk here may hold clues to how Bangladesh, one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to climate change, could harness some of that dark, rich Himalayan muck to protect itself against sea level rise.

Instead of allowing the silt to settle where it wants, Bangladesh has begun to channel it to where it is needed — to fill in shallow soup bowls of land prone to flooding, or to create new land off its long, exposed coast.

The efforts have been limited to small experimental patches, not uniformly promising, and there is still ample concern that a swelling sea could one day soon swallow parts of Bangladesh. But the emerging evidence suggests that a nation that many see as indefensible to the ravages of human-induced climate change could literally raise itself up and save its people — and do so cheaply and simply, using what the mountains and tides bring.

“You can do a lot with the silt that these rivers bring,” said Bea M. ten Tusscher, the Dutch ambassador to Bangladesh. The Netherlands, itself accustomed to engineering its vulnerable low-lands, helps Bangladesh with water management projects. “Those are like little diamonds,” Ms. ten Tusscher said. “You have to use it.”

Satellite images show that in the natural process of erosion and accretion — in some places speeded up by a series of man-made dams and channels — Bangladesh has actually gained land over the last 35 years.

Skeptics say it is folly to expect silt accretion to save the country. Accretion happens slowly, over centuries, they argue, while human-induced climate change is hurtling fast toward Bangladesh. The new land is too muddy and slushy for people to safely live on, and the force of the Himalayan rivers is so powerful that it can wash away newly gained land in one fluke season.

“If you have time to wait, it will happen,” said Atiq Rahman of the Bangladesh Center for Advanced Studies. His country, he added, does not have time to wait.

The silt-trapping experiment has yielded tentative but visible gains here in Beel Bhaina, a low-lying 600-acre soup bowl of land on the banks of the Hari River, a tributary of the Ganges, about 55 miles upstream from the Bay of Bengal. Even at this distance from the coast, it is among the country’s most susceptible to sea rise. The river swells each day with the tides. Creeping salinity in the water table is a harbinger of future danger.

Here, misery made way for a discovery. A devastating flood 10 years ago left this soup bowl — a “beel” in Bengali — inundated with water that reached above Abdul Lateef’s head. No paddy could grow, recalled Mr. Lateef, now 56. Houses went under. The river was so heavily silted it hardly moved. Many families were reduced to penury.

One night, desperate to drain the water, Mr. Lateef and his neighbors punched a hole through the mud embankment that encircled the soup bowl. They watched as the water rushed out. Then the high tide began to haul in sediment, and the soup bowl swiftly filled with silt.

When the chief engineer of the local water board, Sheikh Nurul Ala, came to measure it, he saw that in four years, Beel Bhaina had risen by as much as three feet or more near the river bank, and almost as much farther inland. Today, it is a quilt of green and gray square patches of paddy, cut by square ponds to cultivate fish and shrimp. The river flows more freely now. Mr. Lateef collects an annual harvest of rice, the local staple, and farms shrimp, the most lucrative cash crop, after the rains.

Mr. Ala is trying the experiment in other soup bowls upstream, with mixed results. At one site, the accretion was too limited; at another, it has been promising in patches, but uneven.

American scientists have recommended a somewhat similar silt diversion program: opening Mississippi River levees south of New Orleans to allow sediment-rich water to flow over the region’s marshes, which have been starved of silt since levee-building began in the region hundreds of years ago.

Bangladesh is among the nations most susceptible to climate change. Already prone to cyclones, it could be hit by more frequent and intense tropical storms. Seawater is creeping into the agricultural land. Its long coast is exposed to the hungry sea.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimates that a three-foot rise in sea levels could swallow nearly 20 percent of Bangladesh’s territory. The peril is compounded by the fact that every inch of this densely populated country is settled, even those areas at the constant mercy of the water.

Taming the waters that spill into Bangladesh is no easy task. The rivers change course, banks shift, channels meander at will. They swell when the snows melt thousands of miles away and then again when the clouds burst, turning the green fields gray. They are also heavily engineered upstream: a dam built upstream in neighboring India can critically stanch the flow of freshwater down here, increasingly the chances of salinity and siltation.

The simple silt-trapping engineering here was not designed as an adaptation to sea rise, but Mr. Ala is convinced that it can outpace the projected three-foot rise in sea levels and at least offer some protection. “Some benefit it will provide, I think, by raising the beels,” he said. “The problem will not be as severe for the land we can raise.”
 
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I had been advocating this for a while to let the natural flood (controlled) to flow in monsoon instead of containing it. Flood is the blood line of Bangladesh and our own existence depends on that. Also make india to stop building any dams on major rivers. I hope they will not find Jamuna economically viable for them.
 
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There is always hope but expecting India to do anything for us is wishful thinking. Bangladesh should set up a commando demolition force and infiltrate India and blow up the Farraka Barrage and Tipumakh Dam. Only kidding .......... :devil:
 
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Source: The New Nation - Internet Edition


'Bangladesh must go nuclear to meet energy demand’


bdnews24.com, Dhaka



Bangladesh must go nuclear to meet its energy needs as it offers an attractive proposition for the power-starved country, says a top nuclear physicist.

Dr C S Karim, a former chairman of Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission, argues that benefits from a hugely low cost of operation far outweigh the initial high capital expenses.

"A 600-megawatt N-power plant could cost us US$ 1.2 billion to build, but only 40-45 million a year to buy fuel," Dr Karim tells bdnews24.com in an exclusive interview.

"A similar capacity coal-fired plant- at only US$ 600 million-will be a lot cheaper," he says, "but annual fuel cost will be US$ 120 million at current prices."

An oil-fired plant will require a whopping US$ 450 million annually to pay for its fuel, he estimates, based on today's prices. Gas supply crunch is already causing less-than-capacity output from the country's on-stream power plants.

The cost of building a traditional power plant does not vary much. The prices of fuel do, indeed. And they fluctuate too.

The extra capital cost of a nuclear plant is more than compensated by the annual saving on price of fuel. A nuclear plant usually gets a "lifetime assurance" of fuel supply, says Dr Karim, and its price changes do not have much impact on generation cost.

But how long does it take to put a nuclear plant in place?

"It's a bit tricky … heavy equipment transportation is a major issue here, for example," he explains. "If you miss one monsoon, you have to wait one year." Delays also hike the cost.

If everything goes right, Dr Karim says, "from the first pour of concrete to completion, it's roughly 60 months". Add, he says, another one year for decision-making to contract negotiations.

Dr Karim's assertions came on a day the prime minister told a team of top businessmen that the government was in talks with potential partners for a nuclear power plant.

Very simple, says Dr Karim. "One single source should not supply to the national grid more than a tenth of the peak demand," he argues. "That creates a host of technical problems."

"Anything between 300 and 600 is okay, but probably the optimum option is 600."

The 600-mw option has certain economic advantages, he says, and there could be two similar-capacity plants in the same location.

In fact, Bangladesh needs roughly 6000 megawatts now, whatever the officials say.

Safety concerns have always dominated discussions on the nuclear option, but Dr Karim dismisses the fears. "This is exactly the reason why a nuclear plant is so expensive."

The world's first nuclear-fuelled power plant was built in 1954, and there have since been only two major accidents, says Dr Karim, whose doctoral research dealt with nuclear safety.

And, he says, so much effort and investment have gone into safety research in 55 years of history, especially since the two accidents, that it is "no longer an insurmountable problem at all".

On Mar 28, 1979, a US plant, in Three Mile Island, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, experienced a major accident. "Consequences could be contained, and no death was reported," Dr Karim recalls.

And, in 1986, the world woke up to the real dangers of nuclear accidents when the Chernobyl plant in Ukrain, part of the then Soviet Union, dominated the news agenda for months. The Apr 26 accident killed about 40, some from radiation and others while fighting the deadly fire.

"These two accidents are Maximum Credible Accident type, and (now) form the basis for design of a nuclear power plant," he says.

As far as safety is concerned, says Dr Karim, any nuclear power plant is now a global headache. The World Association of Nuclear Operators (WANO) and others keep an eye on every move in the industry, and regulates it.

"The new concept for NPPs is a passive safety system, meaning their built-in capabilities mitigate consequences of accidents without outside interventions, including those of operators."

Dr Karim, an adviser to the 2007-8 caretaker government, points out Bangladesh is better poised than most countries to win support from the global watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the industry.

"We have an impeccable non-proliferation history. We have signed all the required non-proliferation protocols."

He also refers to existing cooperation agreements with countries such as the US, China and ready-to-be-renewed deals with France. Some other countries are eager to help, he says.

In France, 78 percent of electricity comes from nuclear plants. Lithuania, a small Baltic state, tops the list-with over 80 per cent of its national needs being met from nuclear source.

There are about 440 nuclear power plants worldwide. Had they all been oil-fuelled, the world would have required "an extra Saudi Arabian production", according to an oft-quoted estimate.

"Economic growth is linked to energy growth," says the man who helmed the agriculture ministry for two difficult years when Bangladesh faced two successive floods, a super cyclone and an unprecedented global panic over food shortages. "The latter must grow at double the rate of the economy."

Dr Karim, who co-authored the national energy policy in the 1990s, is not convinced that coal is a sound option.

For instance, even for a 300-mw plant, an average daily need of 3,000 tonnes of coal will require 10 barges or 60 rail cargo carriages for transportation. Added to such hazards is the high environmental cost.

Hydro-electricity has not been seen as a good alternative in Bangladesh. "There are environmental consequences, and downstream river flows are affected, with an impact on lives and livelihoods."

Dr. Karim is in favour of a generation mix. "Nuclear, fossil and renewable energy technologies should all be exploited so that Bangladesh's long-term demands are met on a sustainable basis, reliably and at affordable costs.

"All these have their own advantages and disadvantages and capability to respond to particular types of end uses."
 
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Source: Bangladesh urges nationals to vote for its nominees for New 7 Wonders of Nature_English_Xinhua

Bangladesh urges nationals to vote for its nominees for New 7 Wonders of Nature

English_Xinhua 2009-03-20


DHAKA, March 20 (Xinhua) -- The Bangladeshi government has called on its nationals to vote for two Bangladesh spots nominated to participate in the on-line New 7 Wonders of Nature competition, private news agency UNB reported on Friday.

Bangladesh's Civil Aviation and Tourism Minister GM Quader Friday urged the people to cast their votes online to support the Cox's Bazar sea beach and Sundarbans mangrove forest to increase country's image abroad as a country of natural beauty.

Quader made the remarks while inaugurating a rally organized by "Golden Bangladesh," a social organization, as part of a campaign to encourage people to vote for the two nominees -- Cox's Bazar and Sundarbans.

The "New 7 Wonders of Nature" online search is organized by the non-profit New 7 Wonders Foundation, which also undertook the "New7 Wonders of the World" search which was rounded up in 2007.

Cox's Bazaar sea beach, in southeastern part of Bangladesh, is claimed to be the world's longest natural sandy sea beach.

The Sundarbans delta in the country's southwestern part is the largest mangrove forest in the world, spreading across parts of Bangladesh and West Bengal, India.

Quader said foreigners know Bangladesh as a country of natural disaster or political turmoil despite its tremendous natural beauty and they do not feel encouraged to visit Bangladesh for lack of proper campaign projecting the country's natural beauties.

He said the government would launch a campaign to encourage people to vote for Cox's Bazar and Sundarbans as New 7 Wonders of Nature.

"Simultaneously, the tourist spots would be preserved so that the tourists can enjoy the beauty of nature," the tourism minister was quoted as saying.

The "New 7 Wonders of Nature" will be selected through online voting. The aim of the search is to create public awareness and contribute to the protection of the world's natural heritage and foster respect for cultural diversity, according to the foundation.

The list of nominees and the mechanics for voting are posted on the poll's website New7Wonders: The official global voting platform of New7Wonders.

The top 7 nominees will be officially declared the "New 7 Wonders of Nature" by the year 2011.


Editor: Zhang Xiang
 
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Source: The Daily Star - Details News

Monday, March 23, 2009


Russia keen to set up nuke power plant

Unb, Dhaka: Russian Ambassador to Bangladesh Gennady P Trotsenko yesterday submitted a formal proposal to State Minister for Science and ICT Yafez Osman for setting up a nuclear power plant to meet Bangladesh's growing demand for energy.

Talking to reporters after the meeting with the state minister, the ambassador said Russia is making endeavours to assist Bangladesh to construct nuclear plant to meet her energy needs.

He said a Russian team of experts would soon come here to discuss this issue with the concerned authorities.

The state minister told reporters that they would study the proposal and hold further discussions on it with the Russian expert team.

Earlier, reports said Russia has proposed backing for a 1000-megawatt nuclear power plant at Rooppur.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina told parliament on March 18 that her government would set up a nuclear power plant to meet the growing demand for power.

“We are taking initiative to set up a nuclear power plant at Rooppur site,” Hasina said responding to question from a member during the prime minister's question-answer session in the parliament.

China and South Korea also offered assistance to Bangladesh for setting up the nuclear power plant.

China is willing to support Bangladesh to set up a nuclear power plant on the China-Pakistan model.

International Atomic Energy Agency has already agreed to provide assistance to Bangladesh and approved a Technical Assistance Project on Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant for the cycle 2009-2011.
 
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There is always hope but expecting India to do anything for us is wishful thinking. Bangladesh should set up a commando demolition force and infiltrate India and blow up the Farraka Barrage and Tipumakh Dam. Only kidding .......... :devil:

haha exactly what was going through my mind the other day (but not seriously obviously):cheers:
 
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Source: FBI completes initial work in helping Bangladesh investigate border guards mutiny_English_Xinhua

FBI completes initial work in helping Bangladesh investigate border guards mutiny


English_Xinhua

DHAKA, March 23 (Xinhua) -- An eight-member team of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), who came to help Bangladesh investigate the Feb. 25-26 border guards mutiny, left here on Monday after completing initial work, local media reported.

But the American intelligence agency will continue to work with its counterparts in Bangladesh to probe into the mutiny, private news agency UNB reported Monday quoting a release of U.S. embassy in Dhaka.

The U.S. Ambassador to Bangladesh James F Moriarty made the assurance when he met with Bangladesh's foreign minister, commerce minister and an advisor of prime minister here on Monday, UNB said.

More than 70 people were killed during the bloody mutiny staged by members of the country's paramilitary border force Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) on Feb. 25 morning at BDR headquarters in capital Dhaka.

Moriarty during the meeting explained the FBI team had shared its expertise in investigating complex cases with Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of Bangladesh Police. The CID has "primary responsibility for conducting this important investigation," the release said.

The ambassador said the massive scale of the investigation could take considerable time to complete.

"With FBI assistance, the Police have put in place the mechanisms necessary to conduct this complex investigation in a thorough and transparent manner," the release said.

FBI officials will return to Bangladesh at an appropriate time in the future to review the progress of the investigation and provide any additional suggestions that might be appropriate, the release said.

Meanwhile, the Bangladeshi ministers during the meeting said Bangladesh would devote all the resources required to complete the investigation, it said.

The U.S. ambassador also stressed that his country was committed to strengthening its partnership with Bangladesh's law-enforcement agencies over the long term.

The second eight-member FBI team came to Dhaka last week following a two-member advance team of FBI early this month visited Bangladesh after the government sought assistance of FBI and the UK 's Scotland Yard.

A four-member team of Scotland Yard also came to Bangladesh to help probe into the BDR incident.


Editor: Yan
 
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Source: BANGLADESH SIGNS DEAL WITH KOREAN FIRM TO EXPAND INTERNET NETWORK

BANGLADESH SIGNS DEAL WITH KOREAN FIRM TO EXPAND INTERNET NETWORK

DHAKA, Mar 23, 2009 (AsiaPulse via COMTEX) -- Bangladesh's Telecommunications Minister Razi Uddin Ahmed Razu said the implementation of the Prime Minister's election pledge to build Digital Bangladesh began Thursday with the signing of a deal with a South Korean firm to expand internet to all divisional cities and important district towns.

"It'll be an epoch-making history in the country when the internet information network expansion project will be implemented within a year. Students will have a great opportunity to enhance their knowledge using the internet," he said.

He was addressing a function marking the signing of the deal for implementing the National IP Backbone at the Telecommunications Bhaban.

KT Corp (KSE:030200) of Korea will implement the project at an estimated cost of Tk 300 crore (US$43.9 million).

Managing Director of Bangladesh Telecommunications Limited (BTCL) SM Khabiruzzaman and KT Corp vice president Maeng Soo Ho signed the deed on behalf of their respective organizations.

The salient features of the project are to establish a new optical fiber network, a high-power transmission network using the existing optical fiber, establishing IP POP in important 17 district towns and establish an access network to provide various IP-related services.

State Minister for Post and Telecommunications Engineer Yafes Osman, Secretary Sunil Kanti Bose, BTRC Chairman Brig Gen (retd) Zia Ahmed, South Korean Ambassador in Dhaka Suk Bum Park and BTCL MD SM Khabiruzzaman also spoke on the occasion.

(UNB)
 
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Source: Food & Beverage News: Top Stories - Bangladesh-based PRAN Group to set up food processing plants in India

Bangladesh-based PRAN Group to set up food processing plants in India

Wednesday, March 25, 2009 08:00 IST


Bangladesh-based PRAN (Programme for Rural Advancement Nationally) Group, a leading food processing firm, will be setting up food processing and agro-processing plants in Tripura, Orissa and Tamil Nadu. AAK Chowdhury, CEO, PRAN Group, said that the company would begin food processing and agro-processing plants with an investment of about $5 million in Agartala district. Chowdhury said, "PRAN has also sought approval from a bank in Bangladesh to invest in India. Agartala plant is now in its advanced stage."

"The company would seek loan from Indian financial institutions to set up their projects in Tripura, Orissa and Tamil Nadu. The company had also secured a $150 million loan from the International Finance Corp (IFC) to expand its trade and business. The loan will support the PRAN Group's strategic investment plan over the next three years," Chowdhury added. According to a news report, the state government has allotted about 10 acres to PRAN group at Bodhjung Nagar in west Tripura to set up the unit.

The minister for Tripura Industry and Commerce, J Chowdhury, said, "We shall provide all kind of logistical help to commission the proposed industrial unit and it would earn foreign investment besides generating employment"

Starting its venture in 1980, PRAN manufactures products in six food categories - snacks, confectionary, juice, beverage, culinary products, dairy and premium rice.
 
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i thought this was a BD Defence section -
 
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i thought this was a BD Defence section -

When I started this thread, it was in other section. Since the mod developed new section regarding Bangladesh they switched over or merged my thread into this section. I concentrate to post in "Bangladesh Today" with every area covered e.g. Economy, Defence, Technology, Finance etc.
 
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Source: The Daily Star - Details News

Malaysia assures Bangladesh of all cooperation

Unb, Kuala Lumpur
Malaysian Minister for International Trade and Industry Mohd Yassin has assured Bangladesh of his government' s all possible cooperation regarding visas of 55,000 Bangladeshi workers.

The assurance came on Friday when Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, now in Kuala Lumpur to attend a three-day general assembly of Malaysia's ruling party, met Yassin, the next deputy prime minister of Malaysia.

Dipu Moni also called on Malaysian Prime Minister Dato' Seri Abdullah Haji Ahmad Badawi and handed over a letter of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to Badawi, reported BSS.

The foreign minister informed Yassin about the current status of Bangladeshi workers and said they usually work in the sectors where Malaysian workers normally do not work, said an official release.

"So, there should not be any misconception regarding loss of jobs," the release added.

When the foreign minister requested him for reconsidering the Malaysian government's decision, Yassin assured her of all possible cooperation in this regard.

Dipu Moni also urged the Malaysian minister to make efforts to increase investment in Bangladesh.

In response, Yassin said, "Increased Malaysian investment in Bangladesh would be one of my priorities."

He also stressed the need for growing cooperation between the two countries in trade and commerce at this time of financial crisis.

Dipu Moni congratulated him on his election as the deputy leader of the ruling party and hoped that bilateral relations between the two countries would be strengthened further in the future.
 
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Source: Forty-five women sworn in as lawmakers in Bangladesh :


Forty-five women sworn in as lawmakers in Bangladesh


Dhaka - Forty-five women were sworn in as lawmakers in Bangladesh's Jatiya Sangsad or parliament on Sunday, officials said. The women wear earlier this month elected unopposed to seats reserved for women. They were expected to join Sunday's session, which follows after a nine-day recess.

Thirty-six of the new lawmakers belong to ruling Awami League (AL), four to Jatiya Party, a coalition partner of the AL, and the rest belong to the mainstream opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party.

The 45 were elected unopposed on Mar 19, as their parties nominated them on party strength in the 300-strong House, bringing the total number of lawmakers to 345.

Bangladesh, which returned to democratic system through late last year's general elections ending nearly two years rule of a military-backed government, has a constitutional provision to reserve 45 seats for women.

Women are also free to contest parliament elections directly.

Presently, women hold the posts of head of the government, leader and deputy leader of parliament, leader of the opposition and home and foreign ministers in Bangladesh.

Copyright, respective author or news agency
 
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Bangladesh to throw beggars in jail
From correspondents in Dhaka

Agence France-Presse

April 02, 2009 05:45pm
BANGLADESH has made begging illegal and intends to eliminate the practice from the streets of the impoverished country within five years, an official said.

Hundreds of thousands of people depend on begging to survive in Bangladesh, where 40 per cent of the 144 million population earn less than a $US1 ($1.43) a day.

An official, who declined to be named, told AFP that a Bill had been passed in Parliament this week outlawing begging.

"Anyone caught begging will be put in jail for a month. This includes people who pretend to be ill or use a disability to get money," the official said.

Finance Minister A M A Muhith said in February that his Government, which came to power in December, would eliminate begging within five years.

According to a 2005 survey, a beggar in the capital Dhaka, home to around 27,000 beggars, earns an average 100 taka ($2.08) a day. Beggars in regional towns earn much less.

Bangladesh to throw beggars in jail | World News | News.com.au


Agreat news to ears- i hope begging is eliminated from - world- we dont need these lazy buggers - Bangla desh is better off withotu them, you work ro earn your bread or go to jail.
 
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