Bangladesh Advances Enhanced Transparency Framework Under Paris Agreement

Strengthening National Capacities for Transparent Climate Action and Reporting

January 27, 2025
a group of people posing for the camera

Participants of the Enhanced Transparency Framework (ETF) Workshop in Dhaka, jointly organized by MoEFCC and UNDP, focusing on building national capacity for effective climate action tracking and reporting under the Paris Agreement.

©UNDP Bangladesh

The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) jointly organized a two-day workshop on the Enhanced Transparency Framework (ETF) under the Paris Agreement on January 25–26, 2025 in Dhaka. The event aimed to enhance national capacity for effective climate action tracking and reporting, bringing together 30 stakeholders from government, academia, the private sector, and civil society.

The Paris Agreement's Article 13 establishes the ETF to improve transparency in implementing Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). ETF ensures accurate tracking of climate mitigation, adaptation, and finance efforts, supported by technical expert reviews and peer assessments. While Bangladesh is a global leader in climate resilience, capacity gaps in compiling and analyzing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and climate data pose challenges.

The workshop, facilitated  by Nature Conservation Management (NACOM), C3ER at BRAC University is supported by UNDP's Climate Promise – From Pledge to Impact initiative, focused on building skills for transparency systems, enabling better implementation of the ETF.

The chief guest of the workshop, Dr Farhina Ahmed, Secretary of the MoEFCC, emphasizing the importance of ETF said, “Complying to Enhanced Transparency Framework is not just about reporting—it’s about leading with integrity and unlocking new opportunities, including access to global carbon markets under Article 6. Therefore, it is an opportunity to leverage more climate funds from the national govt, and private sector and blend it with international finance to scale climate action.”

The training encompassed a diverse range of presentations, addressing topics such as Climate Change Policies, National Adaptation Plan (NAP) implementation in Bangladesh, financing and resource mobilization for NAP and Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), and enhancing transparency in the Energy, Waste, Agriculture, Forestry, and Other Land Use (AFOLU), Industrial Processes and Product Use (IPPU) sector as well as Greenhouse Gas (GHG) mitigation modelling, GHG inventory accounting

Dr. Ainun Nishat from C3ER, Dr. SM Munjurul Hannan Khan from NACOM, Dharitri Kumar Sarkar  from MoEFCC,  Md. Ziaul Haque and Mirza Shawkat Ali from DoE, Dr. Shoeb Ahmed & Dr M A A Shoukat Choudhury from BUET attended the workshop.

Through building individual and institutional capacity on the Enhanced Transparency Framework, Bangladesh reaffirms its commitment to the Paris Agreement, advancing its ambitious NDC targets and inspiring global climate action.