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The Current Landscape of EV Adoption in Bangladesh

2025 · Mar 1

Bangladesh is often described as being at the start of its EV journey. That framing is misleading. The country already operates an estimated 1.5 million electric three-wheelers - e-rickshaws and nasimans - which makes it one of the largest electric road fleets in South Asia. The journey that hasn’t started is the formal, four-wheeler, policy-backed one. Understanding the gap between those two realities is the whole story.

Where adoption actually is

The challenges that need to be addressed

  1. Charging reliability, not just charging count. The grid sees voltage swings of around ±10% and periodic load shedding. A charger network is only as useful as its uptime; wide-voltage-tolerance hardware and buffering matter more here than raw kilowatts.
  2. Battery financing and safety. The pack is the single most expensive component. Without formal battery insurance or financing products, buyers either overpay upfront or buy unsafe informal packs - which is what drives the fire incidents that erode public trust.
  3. Standards and interoperability. CCS2 + Type 2 is the stated regulatory direction, but the informal import channel brings in GB/T and proprietary connectors with no common management system. Lock-in and fragmentation are accumulating now.
  4. Duty and local assembly. Passenger-EV duty has fallen, but battery packs still attract 25-37% import duty. Until CKD/SKD local assembly incentives are real, costs stay high and FX exposure stays dangerous.
  5. Recycling and second life. There is effectively no formal lithium-ion recycling in the country. A fleet of 1.5 million electric vehicles will produce a waste stream that nobody currently owns.

The realistic path

The lesson from comparable markets - India, Vietnam, Pakistan - is consistent: start with commercial fleets, not private cars. The total-cost-of-ownership saving for rickshaws, buses, and last-mile delivery is 30-50% over three years, and fleets are anchor customers who justify charging investment. Bangladesh does not have an EV demand problem. It has an infrastructure-reliability, financing, and standards problem - and those are engineering and policy problems, not marketing ones.