Rural
Bangladesh still contains hard‑to‑reach islands, chars and riverine communities
where grid extension is expensive and vulnerable to storms and flooding. This
paper presents the design and performance evaluation of a cost‑constrained, PV‑battery‑diesel
hybrid microgrid sized for about 1,000 connections in a coastal char context.
The design is grounded in Bangladesh’s measured solar resource (Global Solar
Atlas) and policy/market conditions (IDCOL financing, tariffs, net‑metering
guidelines). Using current component cost benchmarks (IRENA, BloombergNEF) and
fuel price data, we model levelized cost of electricity (LCOE), energy delivery
and backup performance over a 20‑year horizon. The reference plant is a 330 kWp
PV array, 1.2 MWh LiFePO₄ storage, and a 150 kVA diesel genset feeding a three‑phase
low‑voltage distribution network. Unsubsidized LCOE is estimated at 0.41 USD/kWh;
with a representative IDCOL‑style capital grant the effective LCOE falls to
0.27 USD/kWh, broadly consistent with reported mini‑grid tariffs of about BDT
30-32 per kWh. The system delivers about 442 MWh/year with an 8–12% diesel
share under conservative assumptions, and maintains service during multi‑day
low‑irradiance events via battery plus right‑sized genset. Sensitivity analysis
shows the LCOE is most affected by distribution network CAPEX, battery
replacement pricing, and demand realization. We discuss implementation risks,
grid‑arrival strategies, and productive‑use enablement. The results indicate
that, in Bangladesh’s remaining off‑grid pockets, carefully engineered PV‑battery
microgrids can meet 24/7 demand at a cost in line with observed tariffs, while
cutting local air pollution and diesel exposure. Key data are provided to
support replication and peer review.