CEO Tab
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
CEO Tab
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
CEO Tab
No Result
View All Result
Home Prime News

B’desh opens Bangalabandha Dry Port for Nepali traders

CEO Tab by CEO Tab
January 9, 2023
in Prime News
0
B’desh opens Bangalabandha Dry Port for Nepali traders
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Nepal can now enjoy easy access to a dry port in Bangladesh to export its yarn to third countries. Neighboring Bangladesh has agreed to allow Nepal, a landlocked Himalayan country, to use its nearest dry port for the exports.

You might also like

NRB Amends Guidelines to Allow Rescheduling and Restructuring of Working Capital Loans

Nepali Commercial Banks See 5.4% Net Profit Growth Amid Loan Recovery

Nepal Agrees to Higher Tariff for Electricity Imports from India

Issuing a public notice two weeks ago, the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies (MoICS) said Bangladesh has already completed the official formalities that will allow Nepal to use its Bangalabandha Dry Port to export Nepali yarn. 

“The National Board of Revenue, the apex body of Bangladesh in tax-related issues, has recently incorporated the matter in its Statutory Regulatory Orders and had it published in the country’s national gazette,” reads the notice forwarded by the MoICS to the Nepal Yarn Manufacturers’ Association.

Nepal has long been demanding Bangladesh to address hurdles to exporting its yarn to Bangladesh, harmonize sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures and review the list of 108 Nepali products which have duty-free access to the Bangladesh market. This includes easy visa facility for Nepalis, preferential treatment for a number of Nepali goods and access to Bangladeshi ports for exporting goods to third countries.

As of now, Bangladesh has been allowing the import of Nepali yarn only by sea. Nepali traders who have been dispatching their yarn to Bangladesh via Bangalabandha were required to send their shipments through Chittagong which increased their trading costs.

In 2002, Bangladesh imposed the restriction on yarn import through the land port seeking to safeguard the local cotton yarn industry from foreign products. The country instead opened up its Benapole Land Port and Chittagong Sea Port for yarn import.

Polyester yarn is one of the major export items of Nepal. According to Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB), the country exported yarn worth Rs 3.30 billion in the first four months of the current fiscal year. Nepal earned Rs 9.51 billion by exporting this product in the fiscal year 2021/22. The figure was Rs 7.34 billion in the FY 2020/21.  

Recently, Bangladesh has been looking forward to purchasing Nepal’s hydroelectricity. Likewise, Bangladeshi investors were keen to invest in Nepal’s water resources, health and tourism, among other sectors. Trade experts say Bangladesh’s latest move indicates the SAARC country is interested in enhancing economic cooperation with Nepal.

Share30Tweet19
CEO Tab

CEO Tab

Recommended For You

NRB Amends Guidelines to Allow Rescheduling and Restructuring of Working Capital Loans

by CEO Tab
March 15, 2026
0
Interest rates not to change despite high demand for loans

Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) has updated the Working Capital Loan Guidance, 2079, introducing provisions that allow rescheduling of certain working capital loans and restructuring for businesses displaced by...

Read more

Nepali Commercial Banks See 5.4% Net Profit Growth Amid Loan Recovery

by CEO Tab
March 15, 2026
0
Banks fail to increase lending despite excess liquidity

Nepali commercial banks increased their net profits by 5.40 percent in the first seven months of the current Fiscal Year (FY), benefiting from improved recovery of bad loans...

Read more

Nepal Agrees to Higher Tariff for Electricity Imports from India

by CEO Tab
March 15, 2026
0
Chitwan industries feeling heat due to irregular power supply

Nepal will pay an additional 1.5 percent to import electricity from India after the two countries agreed to raise tariffs for power supplied by plants in several Indian...

Read more

NEPSE Edges Up Amid Mixed Sector Performance

by CEO Tab
March 15, 2026
0
Share market rises by 74.93 points ahead of monetary policy

The Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE) on Sunday saw a modest rise, gaining 4.45 points to close at 2,824.90 points. The market opened at 2,820.44 points and added around...

Read more

SEBON Plans to Revise Circuit Breaker Rules to Improve Share Market Trading

by CEO Tab
March 12, 2026
0
Sebon mulls over licensing a new stock exchange company

The Securities Board of Nepal (SEBON) has begun preparations to revise the circuit breaker rules in Nepal’s secondary stock market following growing criticism that the current system disrupts...

Read more
Next Post
Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security

Labor permits issued from Janakpur and Biratnagar

Browse by Category

  • Corporate
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • International
  • Major Story
  • Next Gen
  • Opinion
  • Prime News
  • Special Report
  • Tete – A – Tete

EDITOR

Manish Raj Poudel
info@ceotab.com
9841317747


PUBLISHED BY

Welcome Group
www.welcomeadnepal.com

Publisher

www.ceotab.com is a premium news portal being run by Welcome Group. The website features quality business/economic news contents,  in-depth profiles of companies, stories of struggle and success of entrepreneurs, articles that assess various dimensions of  the commerce, trade and economy.

Editor

Manish Raj Poudel

info@ceotab.com

9841317747

Sub-Editor

Riza Poudel

poudelriza@gmail.com

Archives

© 2023 CEO Tab. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment

© 2023 CEO Tab. All rights reserved.