Monthly Archives: September 2011

Deep seaport authority soon

http://www.theindependentbd.com/business/others/71283-deep-seaport-authority-soon.html

Deep seaport authority soon
Author / Source : SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

DHAKA, SEPT 19: The secretary committee on administrative improvement affairs on Monday recommended forming a ‘Deep Seaport Authority’ soon to implement the much-awaited deep sea port project at Sonadia Island. The recommendation was made at the committee meeting held at the cabinet division, with cabinet secretary M Abdul Aziz in the chair.

“The shipping ministry will enact the Deep Seaport Authority Act 2011 for formation of the authority,” Khandoker Anwarul Islam, additional secretary of cabinet division, told The Independent.

The shipping ministry officials said an additional secretary is likely to head the executive board, which would consist of experts from the related field and government officials of the ministry concerned and the Chittagong Port Authority.

The new body will be assigned to monitor the construction of the regional hub port through mobilising Tk 10,500 crore, which is 70 per cent of the total project cost of Tk 15,000 crore.

The authority will mobilise Tk 10,500 crore from the local capital market, bank loan and also from the foreign donor agencies as soft loan.

The grand-alliance government is yet to approve the five techno-economic feasibility study reports of Pacific Consultants International (PCI), a consultancy firm of Japan.

The PCI submitted its reports to the shipping ministry on construction of a deep seaport on March 7, 2007 and it recommended the ‘Sonadia Island’ point, out of nine offshore points, as the most suitable site for construction of deep seaport in Bangladesh.

The study report proposed construction of the deep seaport as a regional hub to facilitate maritime trade with two provinces of China and seven states known as Seven Sisters of Eastern India, in addition to Nepal and Bhutan.

Tyre repairer’s ride to glory

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=203149

Pockets of Change
Tyre repairer’s ride to glory

Tajnahar Begum

Md Fazlur Rahman

Tajnahar Begum came to Dhaka more than 12 years ago to help out her husband, who worked at a rubber factory.

The couple thought the move would help better run the factory as his lone income was not enough to make ends meet.

Tajnahar set up a tyre repairing factory. The single-handed entrepreneur gave the workshop a strong foundation within three years.

On Saturday last, she went on to winning the ‘Best Microentrepreneur of the Year’ award.

Funded by Citi Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Citigroup, and jointly managed by Citibank NA and the Credit and Development Forum, the Citi Microentrepreneurship Awards are designed to recognise individuals and microfinance institutions.

Tajnahar also received prize money worth Tk 350,000 and a certificate to acknowledge her efforts.

The mother of three said the journey was not easy. She faced many hurdles to reach where she is standing today.

“At first, we used to manufacture rubber rollers at a factory from raw materials and sell the items. But the problem was that the factory did not do our job first, which made us uncompetitive.”

“So, we decided to set up a factory on our own. We got a machine at Tk 90,000. We borrowed some money from relatives and took loans from a microfinance institution as we did not have the money to make a start.”

“The machine helped us prepare our own products as well as do outside work. We were able to pay all our loan instalments.”

Tajnahar started with Tk 50,000 to set up the factory to produce rubber, whereas she required Tk 5 lakh.

People were not so enthusiastic about running a rubber roller business, as the raw materials needed to be sourced from local sources, who charged high prices. Besides, the prices of rubber were going up. “Prices would have been much lower if we could import the raw materials.”

Three years ago, the idea of repairing old tyres and giving them a new look struck her. “I had some money at that time. I also took a loan from a microfinance institution and set up a tyre repairing shop.”

Later on, when her business kicked off, she recruited a number of people to help meet orders.

Tajnahar, who comes from Feni, repairs about 30 tyres a day now. She employs 13 people in her rented factory in Shonir Akhra, Dhaka.

She learnt the tricks of the trade from her husband, who left his job at a rubber roll producing factory to give time to her business.

Tajnahar said she now requires Tk 12 lakh to buy a sophisticated machine that will help her produce good quality rubber rollers.

“Now I am repairing small tyres. I want to repair bigger tyres, which will be used in truck and buses. But it all requires money. So we need help.”

Tajnahar said she has to pay a lot of money in factory rent. “I pay Tk 18,500 a month in rent. I will also need more space if I want to set up a factory for bigger tyres.”

She plans to set up a factory where bigger tyres would be repaired in future.

She buys old tyres from hawkers. The repaired tyres are used in CNG-rickshaws, cars and microbuses.

Tajnahar said profits are limited in the small tyre repairing business. “The profit is higher in case of bigger tyres. It would have been good if I could undertake large tyre repairs.”

She said the prices of rubber roll have gone up. As a result, the profit margin has shrunk. “So we are not focusing much on selling the item outside.”

She said her factory mostly uses the rubber roll being produced. However she also sells the item to some outside buyers.

She does not have a showroom now. People collect the repaired tyres from the factory itself.

Tajnahar said she has faced a lot of trouble in giving the business a strong foothold. “Financial insecurity was the main problem. There were times when I had no money. Running the family was tough, let alone the factory. Extortionists also created problems.”

Now Tajnahar does not face such problems. She can manage the finances and her factory runs fairly smoothly.

Tajnahar said her husband was always on her side to help keep the business growing.

She said she did not try her luck in any factory because it would have been tough to look after the young children. “As I run the factory I can manage both the business and the family.”

The 33-year-old said the Citi Microentrepreneurship Awards has given her more encouragement.

“Now I am a more confident person. I will now focus more on the business.”

Tajnahar, who could not continue studies as she got married at a young age, said she would use the money to grow her business.

fazlur.rahman@thedailystar.net

New teams to start market monitoring tomorrow

http://www.bssnews.net/newsDetails.php?cat=0&id=201275&date=2011-09-20

New teams to start market monitoring tomorrow

DHAKA, Sept 20 (BSS) – The Commerce Ministry has reconstituted its eight market monitoring teams empowering them to monitor markets from production level to kitchen markets.

The new teams would start market monitoring tomorrow and it will continue till December this year, said an official handout today.

Deputy Secretary of the ministry of commerce will lead each team formed with representatives from ministries of Agriculture, Home, Food and Disaster Management, Dhaka City Corporation (DCC), Dhaka district administration, FBCCI and Bangladesh Tariff Commission (BTC), RAB and Police.

The market monitoring teams will work under a directive of the commerce ministry to appoint distributors.

The new teams will monitor both wholesale and retail markets and inform the ministry of market price, stock and supply situations.

The reconstituted teams have also been empowered to take stringent action against dishonest businessmen and even conduct mobile courts, the handout added.

Clouds clear over T-Aman prospect in Rangpur

http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/more.php?news_id=150049&date=2011-09-20

Clouds clear over T-Aman prospect in Rangpur

RANGPUR: T-Aman paddy field assumes a captivating greenish look in Rangpur Division. — FE photo Our Correspondent

RANGPUR, Sept 19: The T-Aman paddy fields have assumed an impressive greenish look in all the eight districts under Rangpur division.

According to the Department of Agriculture Extension (DAE) official sources, DAE set a target to cultivate a total of 10,32,828 hectares of land in Rangpur division during the current season.

In the mid-season the cultivation of T-Aman paddy was seriously hampered due to drought like situation. But the recent rainfall changed the scene and helped the farmers become optimistic again about achieving the target.

In order to make the cultivation programme successful, BADC distributed high quality seeds to the farmers at a reasonable price. Fertilisers, pesticides and other required inputs were also supplied to the farmers at fair prices.

The commercial banks including RAKUB disbursed soft loan to the poor and the marginal farmers during the current season to help them bring all cultivable land under cultivation to achieve the country’s food security, sources said.

Deputy Director of DAE Rangpur, Golam Sobhani said the farmers are so much hopeful of a bumper production of the paddy as a congenial climatic condition is now prevailing in the region.

Bangladesh is at front of the way role model in climate adaptation

http://www.bssnews.net/newsDetails.php?cat=0&id=201233&date=2011-09-20

Bangladesh is at front of the way role model in climate adaptation

DHAKA, Sept 20 (BSS)-Ambassador of Denmark Svend Olling today described Bangladesh as a role model in planning to face adverse impacts of climate change and adaptation and assured that Copenhagen would support Dhaka in improving environmental governance and achieving sustainable development.

” Bangladesh is at the front of the way. A role model. Bangladesh is the first country that has already formulated Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan. If you are here, for you climate change is real. In Bangladesh you can see climate change in flood, saline intrusion, drought. This country is already facing the onslaught,” ambassador Svend told a public lecture titled ” Danish Experience of Environmental Good Governance, Climate Change and Sustainable Development: Relevance for
Bangladesh” at National Press Club here.

The public lecture was second in the lecture series marking the entering into 29 th year of founding of FEJB. Chaired by FEJB chairman Quamrul Islam Chowdhury, it was also addressed by UNDP’s former assistant resident representative Shrieen Kamal Sayeed, FEJB vice chairman Badiul Alam, former vice chairman Gaziur Rahman, general secretary Hasan Hafiz, members Mrinal K Roy, Saiful Huda, Masud Karim, Chowdhury Md Ali Kajal, Mahmud Hafiz, Sheikh Enamul Haq, Shaukat Jamil and Rafiqur Rahman.

Delivering the public lecture, ambassador Svend dubbed Dhaka- Copenhagen ties as historic and recalled that Denmark recognized Bangladesh in early February 1972 and Danida started its humanitarian and development works days after victory day- 16 th December, 1971 here.

Since then, he said, though there is a gulf of difference between the two countries in terms of the size- Bangladesh is one of the largest size country with 160 million population and Denmark, a small country with only 5 million people, have strong bilateral and business ties.

Ambassador Svend pointed out that Denmark had made climate change as absolute top level issue at the political level in the run-up Copenhagen climate summit and it had turned into a front- page matter from mere page-ten issue and said, in Bangladesh also as a frontline victim countries, the media attention is high.

Detailing the pathways of his country’s journey towards sustainable development and environmental governance, the envoy said, Denmark had introduced lot of legislations and created comparative advantages for clean energy and green technology and environmental tax is now 2 per cent of Danish GDP.

Ambassador Svend hoped that Bangladesh could take advantage of Danish green technology revolution since Dhaka had huge potential for offshore windmill power plants and carbon-neutral development.

He commended Bangladesh negotiation team for playing a very pragmatic role in global climate change and sustainable development negations for over the years and said Copenhagen unilaterally is offering to cutback its greenhouse gas emissions 30 per cent by 2020 from the 1990 level and in 39 years Denmark would become zero carbon country whatever be the outcome of the Durban climate conference next December.

The Danish envoy said, Bangladesh should raise her capacity to access the CDM benefits and energy efficiency.

Czech keen to provide more scholarships to Bangladeshi students

http://newagebd.com/newspaper1/national/33888.html

Czech keen to provide more scholarships to Bangladeshi students
United News of Bangladesh . Dhaka

The Czech Republic has expressed keen interest to provide more scholarships for Bangladeshi students to pursue their higher education in that country.

The Czech interest was conveyed when its newly appointed ambassador to Bangladesh, Miloslav Stasek presented his credentials to the president, Zillur Rahman, at Bangabhaban Monday.

During the meeting, the Czech ambassador also said that his country was ready to provide all-out cooperation to Bangladesh especially in the trade and commercial sectors to help the country’s socio-economic development.

New Discussion Forum

Hi,

A new discussion forum has been added for this website. This blog remains the primary feature-news site. The forum is primarily to allow readers to post, discuss and share business and investment-related news about the Bangladeshi economy. It can be found on the following link:

http://bangladesheconomy.forumer.com/

Please feel free to repost any of the articles posted here and discuss them.

Thank You.

India duty-free deal ‘game-changer’ for Bangladesh

http://business.asiaone.com/Business/News/Story/A1Story20110918-300069.html

India duty-free deal ‘game-changer’ for Bangladesh

DHAKA – As Abdus Salam Murshedey strolls through his vast garment factory in Dhaka, hundreds of seamstresses stitch shirts for export shipments he says will be boosted by a relaxing of Indian import rules.

Murshedey has built his company, Envoy Group, into a multi-million dollar firm with 18,000 employees on the back of orders from major Western high street brands including Zara, Next and French retail giant Carrefour.

But the shirts the women are working on are for top Indian retailer Pantaloon, and since India recently granted immediate duty-free access to 46 Bangladeshi garment types, Murshedey says orders like this are set to rise.

“I’m going to have to recruit thousands of new workers to meet new Indian orders. Already we’ve received lots of queries from Indian retailers,” he said.

For decades, New Delhi imposed quota restrictions on Bangladeshi garments, limiting duty-free exports to 10 million pieces a year. Murshedey, for example, could only accept Indian orders for up to 300,000 items annually.

“Pantaloon is happy with our quality and price. But we could not raise orders because of the quota bar,” he told AFP.

Bangladesh is the world’s third-largest garment producer, exporting US$19 billion (S$24 billion) of apparel in the year to June 2011. Indian orders accounted for a tiny percentage of this.

The garment industry, which accounts for 80 per cent of the impoverished country’s total exports, relies on orders from European and North American retailers such as Sweden’s H&M, America’s Gap and British supermarket Tesco.

The dependence on the EU and North America worries exporters like Murshedey, who say orders are slowing due to fears of a double dip recession. This is why, he says, he’s relieved by India’s recent announcement.

“The duty-free decision by India means we can now combat any slump in EU and US orders. Our export potential to India is now unlimited,” he said.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced the garment deal during a historic trip to Dhaka earlier this month, in an effort to address long-standing grievances over a multi-billion-dollar trade imbalance in India’s favour.

Dhaka’s exports are worth just one-ninth of the US$4.5 billion (S$5.6 billion) of goods India shipped to Bangladesh in the 2010-11 financial year.

The garment deal is the best thing to have happened to the sector since the 1990s, when similar duty-free access to the EU transformed Bangladesh’s apparel trade into a multi-billion dollar industry, say insiders.

“It will be game-changer in our trade ties,” said Salim Osman, head of the Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA).

Osman said the duty-free access “represents a realistic chance” for Bangladesh to wipe out the trade deficit for the first time in four decades.

“We can raise our exports to as much as US$5 billion by 2015,” he said, adding it will create hundreds of thousands of new jobs and make India the country’s third-largest market after the United States and the EU.

According to the BKMEA, the new duty-free deal will allow Bangladeshi-made shirts, trousers, ladies’ wear, children’s wear, t-shirts and jeans access to Indian markets.

These items are what have made fortunes for Bangladeshi factory owners as the country’s cheap labour means they enjoy a competitive advantage on basic, low-cost goods over their global rivals.

“The beauty of the latest offer is it does not have any strings or quotas attached,” said Shafiul Islam Mohiuddin, head of the 4,500-factory strong Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association.

Indian factories should not be alarmed by the new deal, he said, because many Bangladeshi factories use Indian cotton and yarn to produce the apparel.

But already there have been protests in India, with textile groups pleading with the government to stop the new trade access. Experts say the Indian government must stick to its guns.

“The duty-free access is a reflection that India genuinely believes in much stronger ties with Bangladesh,” said Ifty Islam, a Dhaka-based partner at Asian Tiger Capital.

“India opening its markets means a lot to Bangladeshi industry. It will allow Bangladesh to diversify its export market away from Europe and America to Asia,” he added.

Dhaka’s potential in trade, investment to be showcased

http://www.daily-sun.com/index.php?view=details&type=daily-sun-news&pub_no=339&cat_id=1&menu_id=3&news_type_id=1&index=14

Four-day event in USA in Oct 2011                                                                               Dhaka’s potential in trade, investment to be showcased
Staff Correspondent

Bangladesh Brand Forum is going to organise an exclusive four-day event in the USA titled “Meet Bangladesh: Asia’s Next Big Opportunity” in a bid to showcase the success and potentials of Bangladesh in the field of trade and business.

The event will be held in two separate cities—in New York from October 6 to 7 and in Washington DC from 11 to 12 of the same month, said Shariful Islam, founder of the organisation, at a press conference held at a city hotel yesterday.

He said the aim of the event is to showcase the success and potentials of Bangladesh in the field of trade, business and other achievements to USA businessmen, investors, think tank and the government.

The event will also showcase the richness of art and culture through organising exposition of contemporary art in New York and Washington DC.

The organiser informed they will ogranise a contemporary art exhibition and opening reception in New Work at the first day of the show. In the second day, a conference will be organised to showcase the business and investment opportunity in Bangladesh in energy, power and infrastructure, manufacturing, ICT and business services, financial institutions and investment. A special plenary session will take place on the topic “Role of Diaspora in Bangladesh Development”.

In the third and fourth day programme in Washington DC, two more seminars will be organised at JohnsHopkins University and US Chamber of Commerce.

Peter Dindial, CEO of Grameen Phone IT, Nazia Andaleeb Preema, advisor of Bangladesh Brand Forum and Prof Syed FerhatcAnwar, among others, spoke at the pr4ess conference.

Small, medium RMG units to get 5pc cash incentive

http://newagebd.com/newspaper1/business/33734.html

Small, medium RMG units to get 5pc cash incentive

Staff Correspondent

The Bangladesh Bank on Sunday decided that small and medium apparel exporters would get a 5 per cent cash incentive for finding new markets, besides the 5 per cent subsidy they already enjoyed.

The BB also decided that small and medium readymade garment units that used captive power plants of less than 1MW capacity would get 10 per cent rebate on their bills for on-grid power.

The central bank issued a circular on the day amending two circulars issued in 2010 on providing cash incentives to the RMG industry.

As per the earlier circulars, the export-oriented apparel units are getting a 5 per cent cash subsidy.

From now on, the small and medium garment factories will get an additional 5 per cent cash incentive for finding new markets.

The large exporters will continue to get 2 per cent cash incentive for finding new markets, except in the United States, European Union, and Canada, along with 5 per cent cash subsidy.

BB officials said, although the earlier circulars said that all small and medium apparel industries that did not have captive power generator would get a 10 per cent rebate on power bills, as per the central bank’s latest circular, the industries that had power generators of less than 1MW capacity would get the rebate.

The government, on November 25, 2010, announced a Tk 1,000 crore second economic stimulus package for export industries to help the country’s export sector withstand the adverse impacts of the global recession.

Govt plans to set up more SEZs

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=203071

Govt plans to set up more SEZs
Star Business Report

The government will not allow new export processing zones (EPZs), as it plans to set up special economic zones (SEZs) to boost the pace of industrialisation, said Industries Minister Dilip Barua yesterday.

The objective of developing the SEZs, rather than the EPZs, is to promote domestic entrepreneurs as they contribute to revenue generation and job creations for thousands of people, Barua added.

The minister spoke at a roundtable on “Opportunities for Bangladeshi Business: New Economic Zone Regime” at Ruposhi Bangla Hotel in Dhaka.

Dhaka Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI) in collaboration with Bangladesh Investment Climate Fund (BICF) jointly organised the discussion.

He said the government will establish industrial parks in Sirajganj near Jamuna River and at Miraswarai in Chittagong on vast fallow government lands.

“The process of handing over the ownership of lands from the land ministry to the industries ministry is going on for establishing the SEZs in different areas,” Barua said.

He said both local and foreign nationals will be eligible to invest in the special zones.

Replying to different queries of the participants, the minister ruled out the possibility of expanding the existing eight EPZs as an alternative of SEZs. “There is no scope for such expansion anymore.”

Some of the discussants recommended for expansion of the EPZs as there is scarcity of lands in the country.

Economic zones is an umbrella used to stand for many kinds of zones, such as, free trade zone, EPZs, free ports, IT parks, foreign trade zones and SEZs, said Asif Ibrahim, DCCI president.

Ibrahim said the government has decided to set up seven SEZs in seven divisions in the country to boost local and foreign investments.

Abdul Aziz, director general of the Prime Minister’s Office, said the government has already received 50 applications from domestic and international investors who want to establish SEZs.

The government published a gazette on setting up SEZs on August 1 last year, he added.

Zafrul Islam, acting country director of World Bank Group, also spoke.

Beximco: A story of success

http://www.theindependentbd.com/business/others/71087-beximco-a-story-of-success.html

Beximco: A story of success
Monday, 19 September 2011

With $834 million in revenue, 45,000 employees and a market capitalisation of $1.7 billion on the Dhaka Stock Exchange, Beximco is the country’s largest group although the numbers might not seem impressive when compared with companies in neighbouring India and Pakistan.  “But it is the context that makes Beximco’s growth impressive. It was born when the country was in the midst of a bloody battle for independence from Pakistan. When Bangladesh appealed for international aid in 1971, Henry Kissinger, the US national security advisor to the Richard Nixon administration, then in power, famously dismissed the idea saying, “the place is, and will always be, a basket case.”

A few years earlier, in 1966, the Rahmans’ (Sohail Rahman, chairman, and Salman Rahman, vice chairman of Beximco) father Fazlur Rahman, died leaving a small jute mill in south Dhaka to Sohail Rahman, the magazine reported. The mill was in debt and not doing much business. From 1966 to 1971, Sohail Rahman slashed the company’s debt and increased output. He had planned to make the mill entirely export oriented when the war for independence broke out.

By then the jute mill had been put back on its feet, and “might even had turned out to be a comfortably profitable family business had history been different,” Fortune wrote. The report said that the Rahman brothers had to wait for the government to “relax its rules and privatise some jute mills” before the factory was returned.

“Not that the brothers sat back and waited for their inheritance to be returned. Soon after nationalisation they realised that although jute was the golden fibre, they had to look elsewhere if they had to prosper in their new country. Staying far away from jute and allied products, the brothers set up the Bangladesh Export and Import Company-BEXIMCO- in 1972.

“They started by exporting sea food as well as crushed bones to pharmaceutical companies in Belgium, France, Britain, Germany and the Netherlands. In turn they imported medicines. The business proved almost instantly successful, generating an annual turnover of around $30 million.”

The Fortune report says that the fallout of political turmoils “has occasionally hurt the Rahmans. Although the brothers claim to eschew politics, they have always been involved with politicians.

“Politics is perhaps a convenient sideshow. The Rahman brothers’ focus has always been on business,” the report stated.

Paying rich tribute to the business acumen and foresight of the Rahman brothers, the magazine recounted how Beximco has made its foray into new fields one after another and continued to grow. “In 1976 the Rahmans set up Beximco Pharmaceuticals, which began operations in 1980. The company was listed on the Dhaka Stock Exchange in 1985, and in 2005, became the first Bangladesh company to list on London’s Alternative Investment Exchange. Between 1980 and 2006 the Rahman brothers were on a diversification spree. Chemicals, pharma, banking, textiles…. It seemed there was no industry without Beximco.”

“Shifts in political power see business interests being directly affected, with arrests, political exiles and, sometimes, assassinations. An economist in Dhaka says that a volatile political system compromises the nation’s potential. And as the country enters a phase of growth that some describe as ‘India, 15 years ago’, watching how Beximco is navigating its growth tells a story of new opportunities. Old economy opportunities such as textiles and pharmaceuticals are no longer interesting. It’s the new sectors such as media, hospitality, aviation, and retail that could mirror India’s growth pattern.”

“It’s easier for me to export to the U.S. than it is to India,” says Sohail Rahman, Chairman of the group. That’s why Beximco operates sa1es offices out of New York and Dallas. It has a1so invested $25 million to bui1d a pharmaceutica1 inha1er p1ant in Jubail, Saudi Arabia, and 1aunched two retai1 garment stores under its brand name ‘Yellow’ in Pakistan, with p1ans to go to China and the Far East.

Beximco has 169 foreign employees from 20 countries, including India, the U.S., Spain, Italy, Colombia, Britain, and Pakistan.

“To achieve a global footprint, we’ll have to take our hub outside of Bangladesh,” says Shayan Rahman, director with Beximco. He says the group is in the process of looking at setting up manufacturing in the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, while maintaining Bangladesh as a base.

Today, Beximco controls GMG Airlines, a troubled private carrier with eight planes, including two 767 jets that they snagged for $71 million (as part of an equity infusion that became a majority stake) in 2009. “Initially, we thought it’d be like a PE play. Restructure it and then have a profitable exit,” he says. But that changed after the group brought on global management consultants Bain & Co. to run the project and they saw its potential.

“Domestic growth which has potential is still limited for a group like ours that is ambitious and wants to get to the next level,” says Salman Rahman. “If you take a look at the Indian conglomerates for example, phase two for all of them shows exponential growth.”

FROM THE AIR, THE 200-ACRE Beximco Industrial Park in Sarabo could belong to any developed nation – a perception that continues on the ground. There’s an executive enclave with a basketball court, a swanky gym, geese swimming languidly in a placid lake, and an enclosure with spotted deer. Move away from the industrial park, however, and the scene is vastly different. A muddy stream meanders sluggishly through paddy fields and there’s little to show that this is home to Bangladesh’s biggest conglomerate, the Beximco Group.

Ten years ago, when the Rahman brothers came to Sarabo near Dhaka, there was nothing but the fields and stream. “We had to get the local boys to ferry us in their boats to check out the land,” says 60-year-old Salman Rahman, Beximco Group’s vice chairman.

The progress made in the past decade has been swift; the soggy land has been drained and Beximco’s ceramics and textiles factories stand on it. Some 8,000 workers flock to the site every day to churn out bone china crockery, cloth, and jeans. The textile factories run the gamut of operations from spinning and weaving to dyeing and finishing garments.

Matia seeks FDI in farm sector

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=203072

Matia seeks FDI in farm sector
Star Business Report

Agriculture Minister Matia Chowdhury yesterday called upon the foreign investors to invest in agriculture-based industries in Bangladesh. To make that happen, the government will remove all the barriers, she said.

The minister was speaking at a meeting organised by the Foreign Investors’ Chamber of Commerce & Industry (Ficci) at Dhaka Westin yesterday.

The government is trying to remove the barriers to investment in the country such as the scarcity of electricity and gas, poor infrastructure, dilapidated communication and law and order situation, said the minister.

The country’s 73 percent people are still village based, she said, adding that agriculture has 20 percent contribution to gross domestic product (GDP).

The government has taken initiatives to update its agriculture policy, said Matia.

She said population of Bangladesh has doubled since the Liberation War in 1971. At the same time, food production tripled and the government is trying to make it four or fivefold.

She also said the government is concentrating now on the southern region of the country where plenty of lands are still unused.

Laurent Therond, acting president of Ficci, said Bangladesh needs huge FDI to meet the projected growth of the country. The government should speed up its decision making process, he said.

Rupali Chowdhury, executive committee member of the chamber, and MA Matin, executive director, were also presen

DFO produces 1m fish fries in Jamalpur

http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.com/more.php?news_id=149942&date=2011-09-19

DFO produces 1m fish fries in Jamalpur

JAMALPUR Sept 18 (BSS): District Fisheries Office (DFO) produced huge fish fries through Beel nursery project to help increase the fish production in open water bodies during 2010-2011 in the district.

According to DFO sources, about 1m finger ling’s fish was produced under the Beel nursery programme in seven upazilas of the district against the target of 8 lakh 75 thousand.

The District Fisheries Office (DFO) sources said, under the project, spawn of Rui, Katla and Mrigel fishes were released in the selected open water bodies in seven upazilas of the district. The Fisheries department after nursing the spawn for two months until it enlarged to 4 to 6 inches it arranged to release the finger ling’s fish in the open water bodies by cutting bank of nursery during rainy season.

According to DFO, 1.25 kilogram spawn was released in each upazila of which 20 per cent Katla fish, 50 per cent Rui fish and 30 per cent Mrigel- Kalbaus fish.

Local committee of beneficiaries monitored the nursery side by side of Fisheries department.

District Fisheries Officer Md Nurul Islam said, the government has taken the programme to increase the natural fish resources as indiscriminate fishing decreasing the fish production sharply.