HSIA third terminal stalled with TK 15,000 Cr. loan
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Japanese consortium negotiations collapse as CAAB faces mounting repayment obligations on JICA-funded facility with expired warranties and zero revenue
Third terminal at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport
remains stalled despite TK 15,000 crore loan from Japan International
Cooperation Agency, with Bangladesh facing mounting repayment obligations while
facility generates no revenue.
Civil Aviation Authority of Bangladesh and Japanese
consortium failed to reach agreement after two-day negotiation session in late
November. Talks collapsed over fundamental disagreements on revenue sharing
model and operational structure for managing the facility.
Japanese group rejected CAAB's proposed India-style
income-expenditure model, stating it is incompatible with
international-standard terminal operations. CAAB refused to share revenue from
major income sources including passenger fees and commercial profits, which
consortium says makes project financially unviable.
Construction of terminal is virtually complete, but facility
remains largely idle without signed operator agreement. Terminal was originally
scheduled to open in December 2024. Revised target of end of 2025 has also
passed amid prolonged deadlock.
Bangladesh must begin repaying TK 15,000 crore JICA loan
despite terminal generating zero operational revenue. Substantial portion of
equipment installed at facility is nearing or past warranty expiry, potentially
escalating future maintenance costs significantly.
Government officials are now considering reopening
international tender to find new operator. CAAB has informed Civil Aviation
Ministry and Public-Private Partnership Authority of situation as alternative
solutions are explored.
Industry analysts warn financial risks are mounting with
each passing month. Equipment degradation and expired warranties will require
additional investment before terminal can become operational. Meanwhile, loan
repayment schedule continues regardless of facility's idle status.
Terminal was designed to triple annual passenger capacity at
HSIA and expand cargo handling capabilities. Aviation sector observers describe
facility as strategically vital for Bangladesh's aviation growth and regional
connectivity goals.
Without swift resolution, benefits of expanded capacity will
be further postponed during period of growing passenger demand. Dhaka airport
continues operating without increased capacity amid rising regional competition
from neighbouring countries.
Delayed launch means Bangladesh is missing potential revenue
from terminal operations, commercial activities and increased passenger
throughput. Economic returns that justified original TK 15,000 crore investment
remain unrealized.
Financial burden accumulates as unused terminal sits complete but non-operational. Each month of delay adds to overall project cost while generating no income to offset JICA loan obligations that Bangladesh must honour regardless of operational status.