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India ends transshipment facility for Bangladesh exports

Context:

  • Transshipment facility was initiated by India in 2020 to support Bangladeshs exports to Nepal, Bhutan, and Myanmar via Indian ports and airports.
  • It aimed to facilitate regional connectivity and ease logistical challenges for landlocked neighbors.

Relevance : GS 2(International Relations)

What is Transshipment?

Transfer of cargo at an intermediate port from one vessel/transport mode to another before reaching the final destination.

  • Commonly used when direct shipping routes are impractical or uneconomical.
  • Essential for landlocked countries (like Nepal and Bhutan) and countries with limited port capacity (like Bangladesh).

Transshipment and Bangladesh

  • Bangladesh, with limited deep-sea port infrastructure, depends on transshipment via foreign ports (e.g., Singapore, Colombo) or neighboring countries (especially India).
  • Key sectors, like the Readymade Garments (RMG) industry, rely on smooth transit for exports to Nepal, Bhutan, and Myanmar.

Indias Transshipment Facility to Bangladesh (Since 2020)

  • India had allowed Bangladesh to use its ports and airports for exporting goods to Nepal, Bhutan, and Myanmar.
  • Enhanced regional connectivity, improved logistics, and supported BBIN (Bangladesh-Bhutan-India-Nepal) integration.

Withdrawal of Facility (April 8, 2025):

  • India terminated the facility citing significant congestion at its airports and ports.
  • Caused logistical delays, higher costs, and backlogs, impacting India’s own exports.

Official Justification:

  • MEA clarified the move was due to operational issuesnot political motives.
  • Exports from Bangladesh to Nepal and Bhutan through Indian territory will continue, but transshipment via Indian facilities will not.

Geopolitical Undercurrents:

  • Withdrawal came days after Muhammad Yunus (Bangladesh’s interim govt. adviser) visited Beijing.
  • Yunus advocated for enhanced China-Bangladesh trade and greater access for China through Bangladeshi ports to Northeast India.
  • India did not confirm a direct link, but timing raises speculation of a strategic signal.

Economic Implications for Bangladesh:

  • Readymade garments (RMG) sector, a major export from Bangladesh, may face disruption.
  • Exports to landlocked neighbors now face logistical hurdles and increased costs without Indian port access.

Regional Trade Impact:

  • May strain Bangladeshs trade logistics, especially with Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar.
  • Could push Bangladesh to seek alternate routes or develop self-reliant port infrastructure.
  • May indirectly boost Chinese influence if Bangladesh diversifies toward China-led corridors.

Indias Strategic Concerns:

  • India appears protective of its logistical ecosystem, especially amid rising exports.
  • Likely a calibrated balancing act — addressing internal congestion while signaling geopolitical caution regarding China’s growing regional footprint.

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