Staff Reporter :
Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB) on Thursday responded to Japanese Ambassador to Bangladesh Ito Naoki’s comments on its recent research report which the envoy said ‘baseless’.
Soon after the release of the TIB report titled “Coal and LNG-based Power Projects in Bangladesh: Governance Challenges and the Way Ahead,” on July 3, the Ambassador called upon TIB to ‘present evidence-based argument.”
“Some description of a recent report by TIB, which came out in May this year… I’m not going into the details of the project… but when this report says Japan has been influencing Bangladesh (to use) obsolete technology, I found it’s rather unfounded,” the envoy said in reaction of the report.
In reply to it, TIB Executive Director Iftekharuzzaman on Thursday in a statement said, “While we appreciate Japanese Ambassador’s expectations of evidence-based arguments, we want to assure him that globally accepted methodologies including data collection and validation procedures, and other standards of social science research were strictly followed while conducting the study. There is no scope of treating any aspect of this research unfounded.”
TIB also claimed that they sent a copy of the full report and executive summary to the ambassador earlier.
TIB Executive Director said, “Nowhere in the report did TIB say that Japan was influencing Bangladesh to use obsolete technologies.”
TIB said that the report only quoted relevant experts, according to whom old and brown field boilers from China and Japan were
being claimed as green technologies and thus Bangladesh was being used as a “dumping ground” for surplus and unused coal technologies discarded by developed countries.
“On the other hand, the Japanese envoy stayed away from taking the opportunity to address the question of conflict of interest of Japan with respect to the IEPMP, an issue specifically highlighted in the TIB report, although the ambassador mentioned that it was the third time that Japan was involved in preparing a master plan for the power and energy sector in Bangladesh,” TIB said.
“Providing technical support and consultancies by donors are unavoidable and often necessary components in donor-recipient relationships. Japanese support in developing the IEPMP is therefore welcome, but they could have set a good example of a conflict of interest-free donor practice by facilitating a credible procurement process in which participation of entities having business and investment interest in the eventual implementation of the plan were to be prevented”, the statement said.