Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Thailand's tuktuks take to Bangladesh streets
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

BANGLADESH: July 29, 2002


DHAKA - The tuktuk, the popular three-wheeled vehicle widely used in Thailand, made its debut on the crowded streets of the Bangladesh capital Dhaka last week as a replacement for baby taxis blamed for polluting the city.


Bangladeshi company International Project Support Services System Limited (IPSSL) imported the Thai vehicle, which runs on compressed natural gas (CNG), after Bangladesh decided to ban the baby taxis run on petrol.

"The vehicle is completely pollution-free and also environment-friendly," said IPSSL Managing Director Haider Uzzaman, during a formal launch of the tuktuk service.

He said IPSSL would import 1,000 tuktuks by next month from Thai manufacturer Nattachote Industries Company Limited (NICL).

Haider said his company would assemble tuktuks in Bangladesh in a joint venture with NICL with an investment of $500,000.

"The assembling of the vehicle will begin at the start of 2003 at a plant near Dhaka," he said.

He said the plant would assemble about 500 tuktuks a year. The tuktuk will be renamed later, he added.

A three-seater tuktuk will cost 230,000 taka ($4000) and a 10-seater 260,000 taka, he said.

At the launch, Bangladesh Communications Minister Nazmul Huda said the country has banned the baby taxis starting from September 1 in a drive to cut air pollution.

There are about 35,000 baby taxis in Dhaka alone.

Bangladesh, which has 15 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in reserves, has already started converting the engines of cars and other vehicles to run on CNG.


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
TODAY'S
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

BELGIUM:
EU Revamps Cod Recovery Plan In Bid To Save Species

BELGIUM:
Scrapped Ships Must Be Broken Safely, EU Says

CANADA:
World's Oldest Polar Bear Dies At Canadian Zoo

CANADA:
Canada Wants North American Cap-And-Trade System

FRANCE:
Use Flower Power To Save Europe's Bees - EU Lawmaker

GUATEMALA:
Guatemala Taps Coffee Farms For Hydro Power

INDONESIA:
Indonesia To Plant 100 Million Trees This Year

MACEDONIA:
Macedonians Plant Six Million Trees In Single Day

NIGERIA:
Sea Surges Could Uproot Millions In Nigeria Megacity

PANAMA:
Strong Quake Strikes Panama, No Damage Reported

SINGAPORE:
US, Indonesia Link Up On Forest Carbon Credits

UK:
British Carbon Sale To Swell Government Revenues

UK:
UK Sells Carbon Emissions Permits In First Auction

UK:
UK Law's Passage Arouses Dispute Over Green Energy

US:
INTERVIEW -Obama Climate Pledge "Very Positive" - UN Official

US:
Mammoth Genome Sequence May Explain Extinction

US:
Politicians Persuaded To Save Canada Boreal Forest

US:
Nike, Starbucks Calling For New US Climate Policy

US:
Tiny, Long-Lost Primate Rediscovered In Indonesia

US:
Astronauts Install Water Recycler On Space Station



previous day