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Motorcycles: 2 litres/day. Cars: 10 litres. Trucks: 220 litres.

95% of Bangladesh’s fuel is imported. Fertiliser plants are shutting down.

DHAKA, March 6 (Reuters) – Bangladesh on Friday imposed daily limits on fuel sales after panic buying and stockpiling raised concerns about supply as the war in the ​Middle East roiled global energy markets.
The measures follow U.S. and Israeli ‌airstrikes on Iran – and retaliatory strikes by Tehran across the Middle East – which have disrupted oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, a key energy route, and sent energy ​prices soaring.
Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation (BPC), the state-run importer and distributor, said the curbs ​aim to restrain excessive demand, calm the public and keep ⁠nationwide stocks stable.
“Fuel oil is essential for the country’s development, but about 95% ​of it must be imported,” it said, adding that global instability had occasionally ​delayed shipments.
Rumours about shortages had prompted consumers and dealers to hoard fuel, it added.
Under the limits, motorcycles can buy up to 2 litres of octane or petrol a day; private ​cars 10 litres; SUVs, jeeps and microbuses 20–25 litres; pickups and local ​buses 70–80 litres; and long-distance buses, trucks and container carriers 200–220 litres of diesel.

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