EU Ambassadors Tour Bangladesh Shipyards as Europe Pivots From Aid to $544 Million Private Investment Future

European envoys see Bangladesh as future hub for green investment, sustainable shipbuilding

European ambassadors from the EU, Netherlands, and Spain visited Bangladesh this week to explore green investment and sustainable shipbuilding opportunities. EU Ambassador Michael Miller, Dutch Ambassador Joris van Bommel, and Spanish Ambassador Gabriel Maria Sistiaga Ochoa de Chinchetru toured facilities including recycling company Recover, the Bangladesh Navy’s Dockyard and Engineering Works Limited, and Karnaphuli Ship Builders Ltd in Narayanganj. The Netherlands invested over $544 million in Bangladesh in 2025, making it the top foreign investor. Officials described the EU-Bangladesh relationship as shifting from development aid toward private investment, technology transfer, and sustainable industrial growth.

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The European Union and its two member states – Spain and the Netherlands – have highlighted Bangladesh’s growing potential to become a regional leader in the circular economy and green shipbuilding.

As Bangladesh seeks to diversify its economy beyond the readycreated garment sector, both sides believe that green manufacturing, recycling, and modern shipbuilding could become key pillars of the counattempt’s next chapter of economic growth.

Ambassador and Head of the Delegation of the EU to Bangladesh Michael Miller, Netherlands’ Ambassador to Bangladesh Joris van Bommel, and Ambassador of Spain to Bangladesh Gabriel Maria Sistiaga Ochoa de Chinchetru witnessed several examples of Bangladesh’s industrial transformation during a visit to key industrial facilities.

They visited world’s largest and most modern cotton recycling plant (Recover), the counattempt’s oldest shipbuilding dockyard (Dockyard and Engineering Works Limited, Bangladesh Navy), and one of Bangladesh’s largest private shipyards (Karnaphuli Ship Builders Ltd).

The ambassadors declared these achievements demonstrate how European technology and market access can combine with Bangladeshi entrepreneurship to produce globally competitive industries.

“This is great. The sector holds huge potential. Bangladesh’s economy requireds to modernise and diversify, and the European Union, toobtainher with our member states, wants to be part of your future success story. We are here with an incredibly positive agconcludea,” EU Ambassador Miller informed UNB after visiting Karnaphuli Ship Builders Ltd in Narayanganj this week.

He highlighted how European capital, expertise, and technology can be matched with Bangladeshi entrepreneurship to create this a future success story.

Dutch envoy Bommel declared, “We’re here to understand and to see, in line with the long-standing relationship that we have. So, for the Netherlands, for our embassy here in Dhaka, collaboration in the maritime sector between the Netherlands and Bangladesh is a priority.”

He laid emphasis on working toobtainher to find innovative solutions for building better ships with improved designs, while also collaborating in the future to green the shipbuilding indusattempt.

The Dutch envoy declared they are seeing forward to strengthening business-to-business, knowledge-to-knowledge, and government-to-government cooperation, and to deepening collaboration with Bangladesh’s maritime sector.

With over $544 million invested in 2025, the Netherlands has become the top foreign investor in Bangladesh, fueling growth, jobs, innovation, and shared prosperity.

“I’m very impressed by what you are doing here,” declared the Spanish Ambassador, adding that the maritime sector could be a very important sector in which the European Union and its member states could strengthen their cooperation.

The European Union is seeing beyond its traditional development partnership with Bangladesh and is now focapplying on a new era of investment, innovation, and political cooperation.

Describing the relationship as one that is evolving, Ambassador Miller declared the EU remains Bangladesh’s largest export destination, hugegest source of foreign direct investment, and leading provider of development grants.

However, he stressed that the future partnership will be driven by private-sector investment, technology transfer, and sustainable industrial growth.

“The relationship is shifting from one dominated by development assistance and trade to one centred on investment and political cooperation,” the EU envoy declared.

A major focus of the visit was the promotion of a circular economy. The delegation visited leading recycled cotton fibre producer Recover, one of the world’s largest producers of mechanically recycled cotton.

With recycling facilities in Spain, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Vietnam, and El Salvador, the company is able to support global and complex supply chains.

The EU sees Bangladesh as having enormous potential to become a regional recycling hub, creating new industries while supporting Europe’s own sustainability goals.

The three ambassadors emphasised that Bangladesh’s transition toward greener production will support maintain long-term access to European markets, particularly as the counattempt prepares for graduation from the Least Developed Counattempt (LDC) category.

Representatives of Karnaphuli Shipyard highlighted Bangladesh’s growing technological capacity, explaining that years of collaboration with European partners have enabled the company to master advanced shipbuilding techniques.

They declared Bangladesh now possesses the expertise to construct a wide range of commercial and naval vessels but identified financing and policy support as major challenges to expanding exports.

Shipyard officials called for clearer access to green financing from European institutions, arguing that stronger financial cooperation could transform Bangladesh into a billion-dollar shipbuilding exporter while benefiting both European technology providers and Bangladeshi manufacturers.

The Ambassadors interacted with Managing Director of the Dockyard and Engineering Works Limited, Bangladesh Navy Commodore Faiz, Karnaphuli Ship Builders Ltd founder and Managing Director Engr. M. A. Rashid and officials of the Recover during the daylong visit.





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