Bangladesh has unveiled one of its most comprehensive renewable energy incentive packages to date, reinforcing its commitment to clean energy even as uncertainty over global climate finance threatens to slow the region's transition ahead of the UN Climate Change Conference (COP31) in Antalya, Türkiye.
The latest budget introduced a series of fiscal incentives to spur investment in renewable energy, including zero import duty on solar power generation equipment until 2031 and corporate income tax exemptions for renewable energy projects until 2035.
Officials say the measures will lower investment costs, encourage private-sector participation and help Bangladesh advance its long-term energy security and climate goals.
The incentives come at a critical time as climate-vulnerable countries intensify pressure on developed nations and multilateral lenders to deliver the financing needed for adaptation, clean energy deployment and a just transition away from fossil fuels.
For Bangladesh, the challenge is especially acute. One of the world's most climate-vulnerable countries, it must meet rapidly rising electricity demand while grappling with declining domestic gas reserves, growing reliance on imported fuel and increasingly severe climate impacts.
Together, these pressures have made the country's energy transition not only an environmental necessity but also an economic imperative.
Prime Minister Tarique Rahman's recent visit to China underscored that strategy. Renewable energy cooperation featured prominently in bilateral discussions, spanning utility-scale solar projects, battery energy storage systems, electric vehicle manufacturing, green industries and climate finance.
China is already one of Bangladesh's largest development partners, and policymakers hope its expanding overseas green investment will accelerate the country's renewable energy transition.
Despite its push towards clean energy, Bangladesh continues to depend heavily on fossil fuels to ensure a stable electricity supply.
The government has continued importing liquefied natural gas (LNG) to offset declining domestic gas production while extending tax incentives for coal imports until 2030, arguing that both remain essential during the transition.
The apparent contradiction reflects a broader dilemma across South Asia, where governments are seeking to expand renewable energy without undermining economic growth, industrial competitiveness or energy security.
Bangladesh has pledged to generate 20% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030 and cut greenhouse gas emissions by 21.85% below business-as-usual levels under its updated Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), subject to international support.
Yet renewables still account for only a small share of electricity generation, underscoring the scale of investment required over the coming decade.
Government estimates suggest Bangladesh will need billions of dollars annually to modernize the national grid, expand renewable power generation, strengthen coastal protection and build resilience across agriculture, water resources and urban infrastructure.
Similar trade-offs are evident elsewhere in South Asia.
India, the region's largest economy, is balancing climate resilience with energy transition. Recent assessments indicate that 315 districts face heightened risks of crop losses and food inflation after monsoon rainfall fell 43% below seasonal averages, while utilities continue investing in battery storage alongside coal-fired power plants to maintain grid stability as renewable generation expands.
Against this backdrop, climate finance has emerged as one of the defining issues ahead of COP31.
The World Bank provided $41.2 billion in climate finance in 2024, including $11.5 billion for adaptation projects. But concerns have grown after the institution dropped its target of allocating 45% of financing to climate co-benefits, raising fresh questions about the long-term predictability of support for developing countries.
Although global climate finance reached an estimated $2 trillion in 2024, experts warn that geopolitical tensions, fiscal pressures in donor countries and shifting political priorities could weaken future funding commitments.
For Bangladesh, the stakes are high.
The country needs concessional and grant-based financing not only to reduce emissions but also to adapt to climate impacts already affecting millions through floods, cyclones, sea-level rise, salinity intrusion and agricultural losses.
Finance again dominated discussions during the recent UN climate negotiations in Bonn, where negotiators made only limited progress on key funding issues.
Representatives of the Least Developed Countries group argued that commitments to transition away from fossil fuels cannot succeed without substantially greater financial support, affordable technology transfer and greater policy flexibility. The Maldives also urged negotiators to prioritize "practical, implementable pathways" over ambitious declarations without adequate financial backing.
Attention has now shifted to COP31, where the Turkish presidency has proposed an implementation-focused "Action Agenda" centered on electrification, methane reduction and practical energy transition strategies.
For Bangladesh, however, success will depend as much on implementation at home as on negotiations abroad.
The country continues to face structural constraints, including limited transmission capacity, inadequate energy storage, land shortages for utility-scale solar projects and lengthy approval processes.
Md Shamsuddoha, chief executive of the Centre for Participatory Research and Development (CPRD), said Bangladesh must move beyond policy commitments and develop investment-ready projects.
He said predictable grant-based climate finance—not debt-creating loans—would determine whether climate-vulnerable countries can achieve a just and resilient energy transition.
China's evolving clean energy strategy is expected to remain central to Bangladesh's transition. Chinese investment could accelerate solar deployment, battery storage, electric mobility and grid modernization, but experts say future investments must be backed by transparent governance, strong environmental safeguards and long-term planning.
As COP31 approaches, Bangladesh's challenge extends beyond announcing ambitious policies. The real test will be whether fiscal incentives translate into bankable projects, sustained private investment and stronger international partnerships capable of delivering the finance and technology needed for a credible transition.
For Bangladesh—and much of South Asia—the road to Antalya will be judged not by climate pledges alone, but by whether finance, political commitment and effective implementation arrive quickly enough to strengthen resilience, secure energy supplies and keep the region's clean energy transition on track.