Skip to Main Navigation
PRESS RELEASE May 16, 2018

Bangladesh: World Bank Helps Microenterprises Access to Clean Energy, Green Technologies

Dhaka, May 16, 2018 — The government of Bangladesh today signed a financing agreement with the World Bank to help microenterprises adopt cleaner technologies.

The $110 million Sustainable Enterprise Project will help about 20,000 microenterprises adopt environmentally friendly practices in the manufacturing and agribusiness sectors. It will provide loans to microenterprises for innovative, environmentally sustainable technologies and practices.

Around the globe, we have seen that investing in clean, green, and climate resilient technologies helps countries reduce poverty and achieve sustainable growth,” said Qimiao Fan, Country Director for Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Nepal. “The Project will help Bangladesh create quality jobs, improve competitiveness, and boost growth while improving environmental sustainability and resilience to climate change.”

Half of the country’s population depend for livelihoods on 7 million existing microenterprises. But 90 percent of these negatively impact the environment. For example, a 2014 survey shows only 6 percent of microenterprises disposed solid wastes properly. The project will help microenterprise clusters use cleaner technologies and shared amenities to reduce pollution and become less vulnerable to climate change. It will promote basic safety standards, certify eco‐labeled products, and introduce new, resource‐efficient technologies.

“In recent years, the government of Bangladesh has taken concrete steps to promote a greener, cleaner, and more climate‐resilient economy,” said Kazi Shofiqul Azam, Secretary, Economic Relations Division, Government of Bangladesh. “This project will contribute to faster and more sustainable growth.”

The agreements were signed by Kazi Shofiqul Azam and Qimiao Fan on behalf of the government and the World Bank, respectively, at the Economic Relations Division.

The credit is from the International Development Association, the World Bank’s concessional lending arm, which provides grants or zero-interest loans.  The credit has a 38-year term, including a six-year grace period, and a service charge of 0.75 percent.

The World Bank was among the first development partners to support Bangladesh following its independence. Since then the World Bank has committed more than $28 billion in grants and interest-free credits to the country. In recent years, Bangladesh has been among the largest recipients of the World Bank’s interest-free credits.


Contacts

In Washington:
Elena Karaban
+1 (202) 473-9277
Ekaraban@worldbank.org
Dhaka:
Mehrin Ahmed Mahbub
(880-2) 8159001
mmahbub@worldbank.org
Api
Api