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Inside the silent crisis of Bangladesh’s booming LPG sector, where a massive regulatory deficit and a critical lack of public awareness are turning a vital energy alternative into a fatal hazard.
DHAKA — The air inside the conference hall was thick with the weight of an unacknowledged crisis. Outside, the streets of Dhaka hummed with the frantic energy of a mega-city on the rise. Inside, a gathering of the nation’s top energy minds, regulators, and academics stared at a sobering reality: the energy source keeping millions of Bangladeshi kitchens alive has quietly become one of its greatest domestic threats.
At a high-stakes roundtable discussion titled “Bangladesh’s LPG Sector Faces Rising Safety and Regulatory Challenges,” joint-convened by the Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission (BERC), the LPG Owners Association of Bangladesh (LOAB), and Energy and Power Magazine, industry stakeholders sounded an urgent, unequivocal alarm.
Bangladesh is currently in the grip of a severe natural gas shortage, forcing a massive, rapid migration toward Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG). It is an economic necessity that has transformed the domestic energy landscape. But as the demand for LPG skyrockets to an unprecedented 1.5 to 1.8 million tonnes annually, the country’s safety infrastructure is failing to keep pace.
The verdict from the roundtable was chilling: public awareness remains dangerously stagnant, regulatory oversight is fractured, and the everyday handling of gas cylinders has evolved into a high-stakes gamble with human lives.
The Anatomy of an Explosion: Ghosts of Bailey Road
To understand the sheer stakes of the crisis, one only had to look at the grim specter invoked during the discussion. Professor Yasir Arafat Khan, a distinguished faculty member from the Chemical Engineering Department of the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET), brought a sudden, heavy silence to the room when he referenced the catastrophic Bailey Road fire.
Professor Khan retraced the anatomy of that disaster with clinical precision. Within a mere two minutes of the initial spark, a lethal wall of fire had roared from the ground floor to the very top of the building. The fire service, arriving within an impressive six minutes, found themselves fighting not just flames, but an obstacle course of doom.
"There were gas cylinders everywhere—on the ground floor, blocking the stairs of the building," Professor Khan recounted, pointing to a fatal cocktail of improper storage and likely gas leakage during transport.
The Bailey Road tragedy was not an isolated anomaly; it was a horrifying preview of what happens when a volatile substance is treated with casual indifference.
A Lawless Frontier: 90% of Stations Operating Without Valid Licenses
Perhaps the most damning revelation of the day came when Professor Khan pulled back the curtain on the industry's widespread non-compliance. In a statistic that sent shockwaves through the room, Khan revealed that 90 percent of the LPG stations across Bangladesh are currently operating without a valid license from the Department of Explosives.
This staggering regulatory deficit means that the vast majority of the country's LPG distribution network is functioning completely outside the bounds of official safety verification. Unauthorized storage facilities are mushrooming across suburban and rural areas, completely devoid of basic safety equipment or mandatory installation tools.
Compounding this lawless environment is a highly dangerous practice unfolding at the pumps: the illegal cross-filling of LPG cylinders directly from autogas stations. It is a cut-corner shortcut that experts warn is actively priming the pump for the nation's next mass-casualty accident.
"The absence of a specialized LPG training programme and licensing system allows completely untrained technicians to perform high-risk LPG maintenance works," Professor Khan warned. The hands connecting the valves and sealing the tanks are often operating purely on guesswork.
The Regulator’s Directive: A Call for National Mobilization
Acknowledging the gravity of the situation, BERC Chairman Jalal Ahmed, who attended the roundtable as the chief guest, did not mince words. As the natural gas crisis deepens, LPG is no longer an alternative; it is the cornerstone of Bangladeshi energy.
"Use of LPG is increasing day by day," Chairman Ahmed stated, delivering a mandate for immediate structural reform. "Training on national-level campaigns on safety should be launched."
Ahmed asserted that proposals to formalize rigorous safety training and rewrite national regulatory policies must be aggressively fast-tracked. It is a sentiment strongly echoed by BERC member Syeda Razia Sultana, who emphasized that awareness can no longer be treated as an afterthought—it must be actively drilled into both the corporate suppliers at the stations and the everyday consumers in the kitchen.
The Industry Defends, But Demands Compliance
From the commercial side of the aisle, the message was clear: affordability means nothing without safety. Mohammad Amirul Haque, the President of LOAB who chaired the discussion, noted that while the industry has successfully managed to keep LPG prices fixed at a "very reasonable level" for the public, financial accessibility cannot come at the cost of human lives.
"None of us can deny the issue of safety," Haque declared, throwing down a gauntlet to both the private sector and state machinery. "Everyone has to achieve compliance through a joint initiative of the BERC and the Department of Explosives."
Yet, achieving that compliance is an uphill battle against a deeply entrenched culture of corner-cutting. Sirajul Mawla, President of the LPG Autogas Station Association, openly bared the frustrations of frontline operators.
"We are struggling with safety issues," Mawla admitted candidly. He pinned the blame on a dual crisis: a market flooded with substandard, cheap equipment, and a profound, pervasive lack of fundamental knowledge among the end-users who handle the cylinders daily.
The Horizon: Can Bangladesh Avert Disaster?
As the roundtable concluded, the moderator, Energy and Power Editor Molla Amzad Hossain, synthesized a consensus that felt less like a corporate summary and more like an emergency manifesto.
Bangladesh stands at a critical energy crossroads. The transition to LPG is an undeniable triumph of economic adaptation, keeping millions of households cooking amidst a dwindling natural gas reserve. But as it stands, the sector is building an empire on a foundation of sand.
If 90% of stations continue to operate in the shadows of the law, if untrained hands continue to splice volatile gas lines, and if the public remains blind to the lethal potential sitting beneath their stoves, the tragedy of Bailey Road will cease to be a lesson—it will become a daily occurrence.
The blueprint for survival has been laid bare by the nation's experts: immediate national safety campaigns, aggressive crackdowns on unlicensed cross-filling, and mandatory certifications for every technician in the land. The technology to avert a domestic energy catastrophe exists. The question that remains for Bangladesh's regulators is whether they have the political will to enforce it before the next spark catches.

Ross is known as the Pambansang Blogger ng Pilipinas - An Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Professional by profession and a Social Media Evangelist by heart.
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