A New Report Puts a Number on What Climate Inaction Will Cost Bangladesh. It Is Larger Than Most People Think.

World Bank studies project Bangladesh’s GDP growth could fall by 2–3% by 2050 if climate adaptation is delayed. A separate analysis by Ember and the Climate Vulnerable Forum finds Bangladesh could leapfrog the fossil fuel pathway entirely — using solar, battery storage, and electrification to achieve faster, cheaper, and more secure growth than the conventional energy model. These two reports read together define the choice Bangladesh faces right now: pay for the transition or pay for the consequences.

7,000 Factories, Billions of Litres of Waste. The World Bank Just Approved $370 Million to Start Fixing It.

On February 11, the World Bank approved $370 million to address Dhaka’s industrial wastewater and river pollution crisis. The numbers behind that decision: 7,000 factories discharging 2.4 billion litres of untreated wastewater daily into nearby waterways. Only 20% of Dhaka residents connected to sewer networks. Just 2% with access to functional sludge management. The Buriganga River — once Dhaka’s lifeline — is now clinically dead in stretches. This is a water governance emergency with direct consequences for every factory, every export order, and every ESG rating in Bangladesh.

Dhaka Was the World’s Most Polluted City on May 11. This Has Happened Repeatedly. Nobody Is Calling It an ESG Crisis Yet.

On May 11, Dhaka’s AQI hit 174 — the world’s worst that morning. From May 1 to May 14, Dhaka appeared on IQAir’s most polluted cities list multiple times. Air pollution caused 159,000 premature deaths in Bangladesh in 2019 alone. The World Bank estimates the health and productivity cost at 8.3% of GDP. This is not a weather story. It is a governance failure with a price tag larger than most of Bangladesh’s infrastructure programmes.

Bangladesh Factories Hit 500MW Solar Milestone, Aim to Double it This Year. Built by Brands, Not Bureaucrats📰

Bangladesh’s industrial factories have crossed 500 megawatts of installed rooftop solar capacity. Solar developers expect another 500 MW to be added before the end of 2026. H&M’s suppliers alone would need 2,000 MW to reach net-zero. The Middle East war that drove up fuel prices accelerated decisions that compliance pressure had already initiated. This is what private sector ESG in action looks like: buyer requirement → factory investment → energy security as a byproduct.

Bangladesh Has Until December to Build Its Circular Textile Strategy. The EU Is Watching and Waiting to See If It Is Real

On April 23, the Ministry of Commerce held a national stakeholder consultation on a draft National Strategy on Circular Economy for Textiles — covering 2026 to 2031. BGMEA, BKMEA, and BTMA all showed up. The EU delegation attended. UNIDO and Chatham House provided technical support. The target: finalise the strategy by end of 2026. Whether this becomes real policy or another archived document is the governance question that defines Bangladesh’s next decade of RMG exports.

Bangladesh Throws Away $8 Billion Every Year. It Calls the Pile ‘Textile Waste

Bangladesh generates 600,000 tonnes of textile waste every year. It currently recycles about 30% of cotton-based scraps. Most of the rest is exported to India and Pakistan for processing — then reimported as recycled yarn at a premium. BGMEA’s own Vice-President puts the missed circular economy opportunity at $8 billion annually. This is not waste. It is money Bangladesh is gifting to its competitors.