Amir Khosru seeks expanded ADB support as energy bill jumps by $3b

Finance minister makes the plea at ADB annual meeting
Sohel Parvez
Sohel Parvez

Bangladesh has sought expanded support from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) as geopolitical tensions, inflation, and supply chain disruptions have increased the country’s energy-related expenditures by an estimated $3 billion.

Finance Minister Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury made the plea at a session of the Board of Governors at the 59th annual meeting of ADB in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

Some 47 countries, including Bangladesh, made their presentations at the session.

The finance minister reminded participants that they are meeting at a time of heightened global uncertainty.

“Geopolitical tensions, inflation, tighter financial conditions, and supply chain disruptions are reshaping development trajectories,” he said.

For Bangladesh, a highly energy-deficient country that relies on imports, the conflict in the Middle East has further intensified energy and trade pressures.

Chowdhury said this has resulted in an estimated additional $3 billion in energy-related expenditures, raising external financing needs for the South Asian country.

“We appreciate ADB’s timely budget support for macroeconomic stability and request that countercyclical financing instruments remain available should global risks escalate,” he said.

He noted Bangladesh’s high vulnerability to climate change and urged the ADB to expand concessional climate financing as floods, cyclones, salinity intrusion, and sea-level rise continue to threaten livelihoods and infrastructure.

“We seek expanded concessional climate finance for adaptation and mitigation, including resilient infrastructure, climate-smart agriculture, disaster risk reduction, and nature-based solutions.”

As Bangladesh aims to generate 20 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2030, he also requested ADB’s leadership in the Bangladesh Climate Development Partnership to advance renewable energy, ecosystem restoration, and river and canal rehabilitation.

He said Bangladesh remains firmly committed to reform-driven development. “Our priorities include energy and food security, financial resilience, revenue modernisation, connectivity, export diversification, digital transformation, skills, jobs, social protection, and balanced regional development.”

“We also welcome support for regional connectivity through SASEC (South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation) and wider links among SAARC and with ASEAN countries to strengthen supply chains and expand trade and investment opportunities,” he said.

He stressed the mobilisation of private capital and blended finance, renewable energy, urban development, and digital development for stronger regional crisis response capacity and deeper energy cooperation.

Bangladesh also emphasised enhanced support for AI readiness and future skills, and greater focus on job creation in emerging sectors.

Chowdhury also cited Bangladesh’s challenges in hosting a significant population of forcibly displaced Myanmar nationals on humanitarian grounds and sought ADB’s enhanced support for both displaced populations and host communities.

The finance minister sought ADB’s continued support for timely project delivery and capacity building.

He said Bangladesh encourages ADB to support transformative investments that deepen the country’s regional connectivity, modernise infrastructure, ensure energy security, and strengthen digital and logistics capacity.

“This can boost productivity, unlock the potential of our north-south corridors, create jobs in emerging industries, and reduce poverty and regional disparities.”