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Car manufacturing in Bangladesh: preparing for the next biggest industry after apparel

Black_cats

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Published on 12:00 AM, March 15, 2020
Car manufacturing in Bangladesh: preparing for the next biggest industry after apparel

car_manufacturing_in_bangladesh.jpg

People work in a factory of Bangladesh Auto Industries inside Bangabandhu Industrial Park. Photo: Collected
Nazbul H Khan
Bangladesh will soon start manufacturing cars, that too electric ones, according to a news report published in The Daily Star with the headline "Local firm to set up a $200m plant to make electric vehicle" in July last year.

Presently the country has 12 million people of the medium-income generating affluent bracket and this segment of the population is growing very fast -- by 10 per cent a year.

Meanwhile importing automobiles requires paying import duties ranging from 130 per cent to 850 per cent. This inevitably results in some consumers not getting their desired vehicles within their affordability.

Automobile density, which is the number of vehicles per unit length of the roadway, in Bangladesh is as low as 0.5 per cent, when the global average is 12 per cent.

Moreover, heavy reliance of fossil fuels and the resulting carbon emissions are working against the country's fight to adapt and mitigate the impacts of climate change.

Bangladesh's initiative to manufacture electric vehicles (EVs) is what present times require and will broaden the economy. The large Chinese and Indian markets with duty-free access for Bangladeshi products will be an added advantage soon, once the sector thrives like that of apparel. The manufacture and export of cars are about to unveil a new horizon for Bangladesh.

There is no substitute for industrialisation for accelerating sustainable development but not at the cost of losing farmland and food sufficiency.

The government has also declared that they would create all kinds of infrastructure at designated places for the establishment of industries that could be availed by local and foreign investors.

The Bangladesh Economic Zones Authority (Beza) has been selecting locations in different districts all over the country for special economic zones.

Bangabandhu Industrial Park is an industrial town being built on 30,000 acres of land by the river Feni. This industrial city is being set up on the west side of Mirsarai. This industrial park is expected to generate 1.5 million jobs.

The BEZA executive chairman laid the foundation stone of Bangladesh Auto Industries (BAIL) in the zone a few months back.

The EVs are said to reduce fuel cost by up to 90 per cent and cut down maintenance cost to 10 per cent only.

With zero emissions its carbon footprint is even lower. While electric vehicles made in Bangladesh are expected to cost half that of current market prices, BAIL will ensure after-sales service and spare parts. This guarantees resale of their vehicles, an important factor for the Bangladeshi market which gives a lot of emphasis on resale value.

Mir Masud Kabir, managing director of the BAIL, explained the opportunities of manufacturing environment-friendly automobiles in Bangladesh by leveraging on the fast-growing market and supportive government policies and incentives.

In the next 25 years, 1.5 billion new generation smart vehicles will be manufactured in the world. The smart vehicles' market size is $30 trillion.

While the BAIL is preparing to manufacture two, three and four wheeler EVs, its sister concerns are gearing up to manufacture lithium-ion batteries, motors, controllers and chargers. These are crucial components of EVs. Thus, it is a 360-degree EV manufacturing ecosystem in development.

The question has arisen as to why the BAIL has taken up such an ambitious plan when this country lacks efficiency in many sectors. The answer lies in the initiators of the BAIL having transformed the internet sector earlier and now seeing the automobile sector as the next frontier with a lot of promise and a success story for Bangladesh after apparel.

So how will this industrial city will be getting a supply of 1.5 million skilled people when these industries will be technology-based? The formation of National Skills Development Authority (NSDA) is a possible answer.

However, the NSDA should prepare plans not only for the human resource just entering the job market but also those intending to make a switch over apprehensions their existing sector might come to be abandoned eventually.


The writer is CEO and founder of PART II

www.thedailystar.net/business/news/car-manufacturing-bangladesh-preparing-the-next-biggest-industry-after-apparel-1880917%3famp
 
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OK, seems promising and the road infrastructure in BD is being heavily built up and so should be able to take some extra cars in the future.

Even if the plant builds only some 10s of thousands of vehicles per year for local consumption it will save billions of US dollars in imports every year if this stops people buying imported cars.
 
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OK, seems promising and the road infrastructure in BD is being heavily built up and so should be able to take some extra cars in the future.

Even if the plant builds only some 10s of thousands of vehicles per year for local consumption it will save billions of US dollars in imports every year if this stops people buying imported cars.


good luck....

if you are just going to assemble it wont be much of a advantage
 
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good luck....

if you are just going to assemble it wont be much of a advantage
Depends on who has the outsourcing jobs... Thailand assembles usually what’s made in Malaysia and Indonesia... (that’s for combustion engines) battery powered cars are being made in very few countries... namely US, Japan, China.... if outsourcing work is handed over to countries closer to Bangladesh... it won’t be cost prohibitive to assemble those in bd

what I’m worried about is Bangladesh’s infrastructure, I disagree with @UKBengali because road infrastructure is still very poor in bd
 
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Depends on who has the outsourcing jobs... Thailand assembles usually what’s made in Malaysia and Indonesia... (that’s for combustion engines) battery powered cars are being made in very few countries... namely US, Japan, China.... if outsourcing work is handed over to countries closer to Bangladesh... it won’t be cost prohibitive to assemble those in bd

what I’m worried about is Bangladesh’s infrastructure, I disagree with @UKBengali because road infrastructure is still very poor in bd

Cars will not becoming out for some years yet from this plant.
Road infrastructure is getting better every year.
As long as the cars being brought are not all going on the roads of Dhaka, the cars from this plant will not make much difference.
What you may even find is that the electric cars just replace the imports and so no net increase on the number of cars hitting the roads of BD.
 
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Car manufacturing in Bangladesh: preparing for the next biggest industry after apparel
Japan, Korea, Germany, USA, China and many others are still researching on how to progress on developing lithium batteries that can last longer than now after multiple recharging that eats it away.

It is good to see Bangladesh has or will soon overtake all the renowned car manufacturers of the highly developed western countries. Very good.

But, for now please read the news articles below to know how the western countries are behind BD even though they started to build cars 135 years ago and BD has not yet built a single one. It must be a miracle!!!

https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Au...-join-in-smart-grid-and-electric-car-research

https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Bu...makers-angle-for-EV-primacy-in-Southeast-Asia

https://asia.nikkei.com/Opinion/Slowing-economy-will-not-halt-China-s-EV-ambitions

https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/E...na-s-CATL-and-BYD-to-power-electric-ambitions

https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/C...nd-South-Korea-battle-China-for-future-of-EVs
 
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Cars will not becoming out for some years yet from this plant.
Road infrastructure is getting better every year.
As long as the cars being brought are not all going on the roads of Dhaka, the cars from this plant will not make much difference.
What you may even find is that the electric cars just replace the imports and so no net increase on the number of cars hitting the roads of BD.
Hmm... you may be right. I’m however wondering how the electric generation will be increasing to keep up with EV demand
 
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Hmm... you may be right. I’m however wondering how the electric generation will be increasing to keep up with EV demand

BD will soon have a surplus when projects like Roopur nuclear(2.4GW) and Matarbari coal(1.2GW) come online from 2023-2024.
Electricity generation capacity should not be a problem at all as the government is even thinking about cancelling some upcoming generation projects since there will be too much capacity.
 
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BD will soon have a surplus when projects like Roopur nuclear(2.4GW) and Matarbari coal(1.2GW) come online from 2023-2024.
Electricity generation capacity should not be a problem at all as the government is even thinking about cancelling some upcoming generation projects since there will be too much capacity.

Don't forget Payra which has already started power generation on the first unit (600 MW).

When the second unit goes online (soon), it will have 1.2 GW from that power-plant alone.
 
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Don't forget Payra which has already started power generation on the first unit (600 MW).

When the second unit goes online (soon), it will have 1.2 GW from that power-plant alone.


I was just using those two as examples as lots of other projects will also come online in the next few years.

I am not even counting the electricity that comes from India and will come from Bhutan and Nepal.

The last thing that BD electric car industry needs to worry about is generation capacity.

Good and wide roads are the major stumbling block and this plant has been perfectly timed to take advantage of the massive upgrade of the road network that we are seeing - if these guys know what they are doing they will make a fortune in BD over this decade.
 
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And don't forget renewable sources for power, , a total of 560 MW of power is generated presently from renewable energy, of which a whopping 326 MW, or 52.8%, comes from solar power.

Hydro power sector remains totally unexplored - except Kaptai. Lot of potential there in CHT.

Total current power-generation capacity stands at 20,430 MW, while demand and average production is a lot lower, hovers between 6,500 MW to 11,500 MW. This is before the Payra, Matarbari and Rooppur even come online.

https://www.dhakatribune.com/bangla...h-meet-its-10-renewable-energy-target-by-2020
 
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And don't forget renewable sources for power, , a total of 560 MW of power is generated presently from renewable energy, of which a whopping 326 MW, or 52.8%, comes from solar power.

Hydro power sector remains totally unexplored - except Kaptai. Lot of potential there in CHT.

Total current power-generation capacity stands at 20,430 MW, while demand and average production is a lot lower, hovers between 6,500 MW to 11,500 MW. This is before the Payra, Matarbari and Rooppur even come online.

https://www.dhakatribune.com/bangla...h-meet-its-10-renewable-energy-target-by-2020


I think after these plants, the only other GW+ power plant that will be built this decade will be the 2nd nuclear power plant.
BD will then have enough capacity to last till the end of the decade.

I am really against building any more hydro power plants in CHT as it is not worth changing so much of the pristine environment for only some 100s of MWs of electricity.
 
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I think after these plants, the only other GW+ power plant that will be built this decade will be the 2nd nuclear power plant.
BD will then have enough capacity to last till the end of the decade.

Yes by another ten years (definitely by 2030) we would have transferred enough tech to build some on our own, especially fossil-fuel ones. By 2040, renewables will be the majority of power source.
 
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