Bangladesh’s four licensed telecom tower companies have joined forces to launch the Bangladesh TowerCo Association. The new body aims to speed up growth in the telecom sector by working more closely with regulators and industry partners. The launch took place at the TowerCo Build Forward Forum 2025, In the first paragraph alone it’s made clear that this Association will play a central role in shaping telecom infrastructure in Bangladesh. The event, held under the theme “Unifying TowerCo for a Smarter Bangladesh,” highlighted how TowerCos enable more than ninety percent of the nation’s mobile network coverage. Their collective voice is now expected to push for better standards, smoother permitting, and stronger alignment with government telecom goals. Leaders from all four companies spoke at the forum, along with officials from the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission. The BTRC chairman praised the move, calling it a key step for transparency and predictable regulation under the new National Infrastructure and Connectivity Services Provider framework. He said setting and monitoring performance standards across the industry will build confidence and draw investment in mobile connectivity infrastructure. This mix of public and private sector engagement shows how ICT and technology sectors can work together to support digital growth. Industry executives welcomed the policy proposal, but also stressed the need for effective execution. They pointed to long-standing challenges such as delays in site acquisition, inconsistent indoor coverage due to lack of distributed antenna systems, and persistent energy issues like generator reliability and battery theft. The leaders agreed that fixing these operational hurdles through unified action will be essential to support future expansion and improve service quality. Beyond the core infrastructure, the Association also plans to advocate for shared passive infrastructure models, enabling cost‑effective deployment of 4G, 5G and IoT networks. Industry analysts believe that the tower sector’s growth potential could attract new foreign investment and accelerate digital inclusion in rural and urban areas alike. They encouraged more collaboration across engineering, energy, and smart city stakeholders to unlock these opportunities. Speakers noted that better indoor coverage and smoother infrastructure rollout would benefit multiple sectors beyond telecom. With improved connectivity, sectors like e-commerce, finance, healthcare and education can scale digital services more widely. The TowerCo Association sees itself as a bridge between mobile connectivity infrastructure and broader technology-driven economic growth. As the forum ended, participants made a clear joint commitment: to build a telecom ecosystem that is reform-oriented, investor‑friendly, and innovation-driven. With this unified platform now in place, Bangladesh is poised to accelerate its telecom infrastructure development and support broader ICT-driven transformation. The success of the TowerCo Association will depend on continued coordination among depot operators, policy makers, telecom operators and technology providers.
Bangladesh TowerCo Association formed to catalyse telecom sector growth
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