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UNESCO asks Bangladesh to stop building coal-fired power plant

by The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Environment Financing Operations Sustainability Energy Mining & Resources Public Sector


The government in Dhaka is building the plant plant near ecologically sensitive mangrove forests that are one of the world's last tiger habitats

DHAKA, Bangladesh—The U.N. agency devoted to preserving world heritage has joined environmental groups urging Bangladesh to halt plans for a massive coal-fired power plant near ecologically sensitive mangrove forests on the country’s coast.

UNESCO and the IUCN say in a report released this week that the project poses a “serious threat” to a region that protects the nation from flooding and holds one of the world’s last populations of wild tigers.

Bangladesh countered on Thursday that the concerns were misplaced, and that construction would continue. It says the 1.3-gigawatt power station is crucial to expanding electricity capacity in a country where only six out of 10 people have access to power.

The country’s junior power minister, Nasrul Hamid, said UNESCO’s report ignored government assurances that the plant would be safe.

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