Bangladesh: Petrobangla to float int’l tenders this year

Dhaka, July 12, 2014 (New Age): The state-run Petrobangla is planning to float international tenders by this year for oil and gas exploration in eight offshore blocks, the boundaries of which have been settled by the Permanent Court of Arbitration, officials have said. They said that Petrobangla, under model production sharing contract, would offer more stakes to the international oil companies than the model PSC 2012 had done for exploring the area. Petrobangla chairman Hossain Monsur said that the conditions for the tenders would be set in a way so that the international oil companies were attracted. He said that Petrobangla was also weighing the idea of engaging its subsidiary Bapex in joint venture with competent foreign firms for oil and gas exploration in the eight offshore blocks. Besides, he said that the government would itself invest in a section of the blocks by employing foreign firms. Prime minister Sheikh Hasina, who also holds the ministry of power, energy and mineral resources, asked the authorities to rearrange the boundaries of the eight offshore blocks based on the maritime boundary demarcated between Bangladesh and India by the Hague-based Arbitration Court, secretary to the PMO Abul Kalam Azad told New Age. The Arbitration Court verdict enabled Bangladesh to explore two shallow sea blocks ­– 1 and 5 – and six deep sea blocks – 9, 14, 15, 19, 24 and 25 – leaving a total of about 6,000 square kilometres area of the Bay of Bengal to the Indian side, officials said. In 2008, Bangladesh suspended a bidding process in the eight offshore blocks as India claimed its ownership over the sea area. Myanmar also claimed its ownership over a number of offshore blocks in the western area of the Bay forcing Bangladesh to conduct offshore bidding for eight blocks out of 20. In 2012, International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea settled the maritime boundary between Bangladesh and Myanmar. In February 2014, Petrobangla completed the process for international tenders for oil and gas exploration in 12 offshore blocks – nine in the shallow sea and three in the deep sea – under Model Production Sharing Contract 2012. The shallow sea blocks are 2, 3, 4, and 6 to 11 and deep sea blocks are 12, 16 and 21. In the model PSC 2012, Petrobangla had already increased the IOCs’ share of gas to $4.5 from $2.9 per 1,000 cubic feet extracted from the shallow sea, while the price for deep sea gas was increased to $6 from $4.5 in 2008. Among other benefits, Petrobangla, in the model PSC 2012, increased the margin of cost recovery to 70 per cent from 55 per cent of the oil and gas extracted from deep sea blocks.

Bangladesh: Many MPs cannot use e-mail

Dhaka, July 12, 2014 (New Age): The parliament secretariat’s e-mail notice programme proved futile as less than half a dozen out of the 350 lawmakers regularly open e-mail and many of them cannot use e-mail. The system was introduced in 2012 to digitalise the notification as there were widespread allegations of missing or unusual delay in reaching important notices and letters send by the parliament secretariat to the lawmakers, said the Jatiya Sangsad Secretariat information technology director, Abdur Razzaque. He said that a short message service was also introduced simultaneously to send notifications to the lawmakers. Parliament secretariat sources said that usually they sent all notifications like notices on summoning parliament, standing committee meetings, order of the day and working papers. Voters from any constituency can also contact their lawmakers on any issue. The sources, however, said that not more than half a dozen of the 350 lawmakers regularly opened e-mails sent from the parliament secretariat and most of the lawmakers could not use e-mail. They said that although the SMS service had some impact, but it was hard to send all the notices in through SMS because of limit of text message sizes. Some of the lawmakers, however, told New Age that they were not getting e-mail or SMS timely. Amatul Kibria Keya Chowdhury (women seat 328, Sylhet) said that she received neither SMS nor e-mail timely and that was why she missed some programmes arranged by the parliament secretariat. Imran Ahmed (Sylhet-4), one of the few lawmakers habituated with e-mail notice system, however, said that he regularly received the notices and letters issued by the secretariat through e-mail.  He said that his colleagues should be accustomed to the system and help materialising the digitisation. The chief whip of the opposition in parliament, Tajul Islam Choudhury, said that he was not habituated to the use of e-mail. ‘My private secretary sometimes opens it and he informs me about the notices,’ he said. Awami League lawmaker Md Manzurul Islam Liton (Gaibandha-1) said that he was not aware of the matter. The speaker, Shirin Sharimin Chaudhury, said that she would take initiative so that lawmakers could become accustomed to the system.

Bangladesh: Govt stages drama over maritime boundary: Fakhrul

Dhaka, July 12, 2014 (New Age): The acting Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, on Friday said that the government started staging drama over the demarcation of sea boundary with India. Addressing a function at Dhaka Reporters’ Unity, he said that Bangladesh lost 6,000 square kilometres of sea area and South Talpatti island, but the Awami League-led government was claiming that it was a big victory. He said that the people of Bangladesh understood whether it was a victory or defeat. Referring to a write up of former US ambassador in Dhaka William Mailam, he said that Bangladesh was now again moving towards one party rule to establish dictatorship. Fakhrul said that the government should not be allowed anyway to continue in power. The government is destroying all institutions, he added.

Bangladesh: Govt stages drama over maritime boundary: Fakhrul

Dhaka, July 12, 2014 (New Age): The acting Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, on Friday said that the government started staging drama over the demarcation of sea boundary with India. Addressing a function at Dhaka Reporters’ Unity, he said that Bangladesh lost 6,000 square kilometres of sea area and South Talpatti island, but the Awami League-led government was claiming that it was a big victory. He said that the people of Bangladesh understood whether it was a victory or defeat. Referring to a write up of former US ambassador in Dhaka William Mailam, he said that Bangladesh was now again moving towards one party rule to establish dictatorship. Fakhrul said that the government should not be allowed anyway to continue in power. The government is destroying all institutions, he added.

Bangladesh: Vermicelli not on BSTI list of consumer products

Dhaka, July 12, 2014 (New Age): Vermicelli except the oil-fried ones (lachchha semai) is not on the list of mandatory certification marks of the Bangladesh Standards and Testing Institution despite its huge demand not only in Ramadan but throughout the year.
Dishonest businessmen taking advantage of the loophole have set up hundreds of manually operated machines in different parts of the country, mainly in the slums and remote areas, for producing the food item ignoring its quality.
Lachchha semai, though it is on the list of BSTI consumer items, are also being produced in the unauthorised factories using low quality and harmful raw materials.
The producers are sending low-quality vermicelli in colourful packs similar to popular brands for exploiting the customers. Sometimes they are using the fake BSTI sticker on the packets.
Former director general of the institution Golam Mowlah told New Age on Friday that vermicelli was a popular and widely consumed food item in the country, but there was no constant monitoring on its production.
‘The authorities including the BSTI cannot avoid the responsibility. They must ensure quality of vermicelli as an important food item,’ he said adding that the institution should bring all sorts of vermicelli on the list of its consumer products.
Golam Mowlah, also professor of Institute of Nutrition and Food Science at Dhaka University, said that consumption of substandard vermicelli could cause serious health hazards including acidity, vomiting, diarrhoea and many other diseases as low grades raw materials including expired flour and substandard oil were being used for producing the food item.
The law enforcing agencies on Thursday busted an unauthorised factory at Kamrangir Char in the capital where adulterated and low quality vermicelli was being packaged using the label of ‘Pure ACI Vermicelli’.
ACI Limited authorities, however, told the law enforcers that they had no such vermicelli factory there.
In Rangpur, a section of unauthorised factory owners are reportedly manufacturing substandard lachchha semai, Ghee Bhaja Semai and Sada Semai at places in the district including station area, Babupara, Alamnagar, Shalbon, Mulatol and CO Bazar areas in the city.
In Nilphamari, several hundred makeshift factories have been set at places at Syedpur upazila to produce substandard vermicelli.
In Rajshahi, many businessmen usually set up factories before every Eid at Rajshahi BISIC industrial zone and its adjacent areas to produce substandard vermicelli for extra benefit.
New Age correspondent in Chittagong correspondent reported that dishonest businessmen were producing and marketing substandard vermicelli setting up makeshift factories at places in the city including Khatunganj, Asadganj, Bakolia, Badurtala and Madarbari.
The Institute of Public Health tested vermicelli in the last two years and found that many of the tested vermicelli were adulterated.
Bangladesh Standards and Testing Institution assistant director Reazul Haque said that he had already directed the field officers to make a list of the manufacturers of substandard and adulterated vermicelli considering public health.