# 2026-27 Budget: Ambitious Environmental and Climate Goals, Financing Concerns

*The proposed budget for 2026-27 includes ambitious environmental and climate goals but faces criticism for unclear financing and insufficient allocations.*

June 13, 2026 · Bangladesh

## At a glance

- Proposed budget includes 100 crore taka for climate change trust.
- Experts criticize insufficient funding and unclear financing sources.
- Budget reflects several election manifesto promises but raises critical questions.

The proposed budget for the 2026-27 fiscal year under the Bangladesh Climate Change Trust includes an allocation of 100 crore taka, despite experts deeming it inadequate to address the impacts of climate change. The budget acknowledges climate change impacts in Bangladesh but faces criticism for insufficient funding and lack of clear financing sources. Air pollution is identified as a major environmental issue nationwide, with researchers highlighting the absence of effective control plans. The budget reflects several promises from the BNP's election manifesto, such as planting 25 crore trees, creating 3.5 lakh jobs, and initiatives like 'One Child One Tree' and 'Circular Future Model'. The use of apps for tree planting monitoring, proposals to control plastic and air pollution, and the 'Three R' approach (Reduce, Reuse, and Repurpose) for plastics are also included. Environmental and climate expert Haseeb Muhammad Irfanullah views the environmental conservation and climate change mitigation sections of the proposed 2026-27 budget positively, noting the government's attempt to follow through on its election manifesto promises. However, he raises several critical questions: the source of financing for such large-scale goals is unclear, the allocation of only 100 crore taka to the Bangladesh Climate Change Trust Fund is disappointing, the budget fails to address the need for alternatives to reduce plastic pollution, and there are questions about the feasibility of carbon trading given Bangladesh's limited experience. The most significant shortfall, according to Irfanullah, is the absence of a comprehensive financial roadmap for implementing the National Adaptation Plan (NAP) and Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC).

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Source: https://pulsetoday.com.bd/en/bangladesh/budget-environment-climate-ambitious-goals-unclear-financing
