Dhaka cuts office hours and turns off wedding lights


Dhaka cut office and shop hours and banned decorative lighting at weddings as it seeks to conserve energy stocks after global price hikes due to the Middle East conflict.

Bangladesh imports 95% of its oil and gas needs, mostly from the Middle East and said that, while there are adequate stocks of ­petrol and diesel, it hopes to mitigate the effects of “unsecured” supply lines.

About 60% of its electricity is generated using imported gas, while diesel is primarily used for farming in the region.

Dhaka ordered all government, private offices and banks to shut an hour earlier each day starting Friday until further notice.

“The fuel supply line is unsecured... both government and ­private offices will run from 9am to 4pm, while banks will remain open from 9am to 3pm,” top government secretary Nasimul Gani told reporters at a news briefing late Thursday.

Shopping centres, which normally stay open late, will now shut by 6pm, although stores selling food supplies are expected to keep their usual hours.

Decorative lighting, which was initially banned at malls, has now been extended to include weddings.

Weddings in Bangladesh are celebrations that entertain ­hundreds of guests at brightly decorated venues and can often co-opt large parts of a neighbourhood.

The government has also asked departments to refrain from ­purchasing vehicles and computers and to limit money being spent on hospitality costs for work events.

Foreign training missions for government officials have also been suspended, while domestic training will be cut by half.

The measures will reduce at least 30% of total fuel consumption, officials estimated.

Schools and colleges could also see schedule changes as the government considers purchasing electric buses for student transport.

Bangladesh has said it is seeking loans of around US$2bil (RM8.05bil) from multilateral donors to tackle energy worries.

Apart from the latest measures, the government has also set limits on fuel purchases, halted production at most fertiliser factories and deployed police to patrol ­petrol stations.

The government conducted around 5,000 raids and confiscated about 400,000 litres of illegally acquired fuel between March 3 and April 1, a spokesperson for the Fuel and Energy Division said. — AFP

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