Before approving a Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) project, every finance team asks the same question: when does this pay for itself? Unlike a simple equipment purchase, BESS savings come from multiple overlapping sources — fuel avoidance, demand-charge reduction, energy arbitrage, and avoided downtime — which makes a generic “price per kWh” comparison misleading. This guide walks through a complete, Bangladesh-specific framework for calculating BESS ROI, with a worked example using current 2026 tariffs.
If you haven’t yet read our foundational guide, start with What is a Battery Energy Storage System (BESS)? for the technology basics.
Why a Generic ROI Number Doesn’t Work
Every BESS payback calculation you’ll find online assumes a specific electricity tariff, diesel price, outage pattern, and battery cost — none of which match your facility exactly. A factory in Gazipur on a High Tension industrial tariff with frequent load-shedding has a completely different payback period than a commercial building in Dhaka on a Low Tension tariff with a stable grid connection. The only reliable way to evaluate BESS ROI is to build the calculation around your own site data.
Step 1: Identify Your Savings Sources
A BESS typically generates value from up to four distinct sources. Not every site captures all four, but most projects combine at least two or three:
1. Diesel fuel avoidance — If you currently run a generator during load-shedding or outages, every kWh the BESS delivers instead is diesel you no longer burn. At roughly ৳115 per litre (2026 pricing) and typical industrial generator fuel consumption, this is often the single largest savings line for sites with heavy generator reliance.
2. Demand-charge reduction (peak shaving) — Industrial and commercial tariffs in Bangladesh include a demand charge based on your sanctioned/peak load, separate from the energy charge per kWh. A BESS can discharge during your facility’s peak demand windows, lowering your billed peak and therefore your demand charge — a savings a generator cannot replicate in the same way, since it’s about grid-billed demand, not just backup.
3. Energy arbitrage (time-of-use savings) — Where time-of-use tariffs apply, charging the battery during cheaper off-peak hours and discharging during costlier peak hours creates a savings spread, even with no outage involved.
4. Avoided downtime and production loss — For automated manufacturing lines, even a few seconds of voltage interruption can cause a batch failure, equipment reset, or quality defect. The value of avoided downtime is harder to quantify precisely but can be the largest hidden number in the calculation for sensitive production lines.
Step 2: Gather Your Site-Specific Inputs
Before any ROI number means anything, collect:
- Current monthly electricity bill (with tariff category — LT, MT, HT, or EHT — and demand charge line item)
- Current diesel consumption for backup power, in litres/month, and current diesel price paid
- Average and peak outage hours per day/week over a representative period
- Critical load profile — which loads must stay powered, and at what kW
- Existing equipment — do you already have a generator and/or solar that the BESS needs to integrate with?
Step 3: Build the Cost Side of the Equation
A BESS investment has three cost components:
- Capital expenditure (CapEx): Battery modules, PCS/inverter, EMS, enclosure, installation, and commissioning
- Operating expenditure (OpEx): Monitoring, periodic inspection, insurance, and the electricity cost of recharging the battery itself
- Replacement/degradation reserve: Battery capacity degrades roughly 2–3% per year; a conservative model should account for capacity tapering over the system’s 10–15 year design life, even though full replacement is rarely needed within that period for well-managed LiFePO4 systems
Step 4: Worked Example
To illustrate the method (not to predict your exact numbers), consider a mid-size factory with the following profile:
- Backup load: 100 kW for an average of 4 hours/day during load-shedding
- Current solution: diesel generator consuming roughly 25–30 litres/hour at this load
- Diesel price: ৳115/litre
- Daily diesel cost avoided: approximately ৳11,500–৳13,800 (25–30 litres × 4 hours × ৳115)
- Annualized (300 operating days): roughly ৳3.45 million–৳4.14 million in avoided diesel cost alone
- Additional demand-charge savings: factored separately based on the facility’s specific MT/HT tariff structure and peak-shaving capability
Against this, the factory weighs the BESS system’s total installed cost (CapEx) plus its modest annual OpEx. Dividing the system’s net cost by the annual savings gives a simple payback period; a more rigorous analysis also discounts future cash flows to calculate Net Present Value (NPV) and Internal Rate of Return (IRR) — the metrics most finance committees will actually want to see.
Important: This example uses illustrative consumption figures to demonstrate the calculation method. Your actual generator fuel consumption, demand-charge exposure, and outage pattern will change the result significantly — which is exactly why a site-specific audit matters more than any published “average” BESS payback figure.
Step 5: Compare Against the Alternative (Status Quo or Diesel)
A common mistake is calculating BESS ROI in isolation, as if “do nothing” were free. It isn’t — continuing to run a diesel generator has its own ongoing cost trajectory, especially as diesel prices have shown a long-term upward trend and engine maintenance costs accumulate with age. For a full side-by-side breakdown of this comparison, see BESS vs Diesel Generator: Which is Better for Bangladeshi Factories in 2026?
Step 6: Add Solar to Improve the Payback Period
Pairing the BESS with rooftop solar typically shortens payback significantly, because the battery can store free daytime solar generation rather than relying solely on grid-charged or generator-charged electricity. This also takes advantage of Bangladesh’s 2025 Net Metering Guidelines, which now allow up to 100% of sanctioned load to be net-metered. We explore the combined economics in Solar + BESS Hybrid: The Ultimate Energy Solution for Bangladeshi Industries. If you’re modeling solar ROI separately, our companion guide How to Calculate Rooftop Solar ROI for Your Factory in Bangladesh uses the same financial framework.
Sensitivity Analysis: Why You Should Model More Than One Scenario
Because BESS ROI depends on several variables that can each shift independently — diesel prices, outage frequency, and tariff rates — a single-point estimate can be misleading. A more robust approach is to model at least three scenarios:
- Conservative case: Lower-than-expected outage hours, no further diesel price increases, modest demand-charge savings
- Base case: Outage hours and diesel prices consistent with your trailing 12-month average
- Upside case: Continued diesel price increases (consistent with the long-term trend) and/or worsening grid reliability, both of which increase the relative value of BESS
Running all three gives decision-makers a realistic payback range rather than a single number that may not hold if conditions change — which is particularly relevant given how much diesel prices in Bangladesh have moved over recent years. It also helps answer the more useful underlying question: even in the conservative case, does the investment still make sense?
Financing Options to Factor Into Your ROI Model
How you finance a BESS materially changes the relevant ROI metric:
Outright purchase (CapEx): You bear the full upfront cost and capture 100% of ongoing savings. The relevant ROI metrics are simple payback period, NPV, and IRR over the system’s design life.
Lease or financed purchase: Spreading the capital cost over time changes the calculation to a cash-flow comparison — comparing your monthly lease/financing payment against your monthly savings from fuel avoidance and demand-charge reduction, rather than a single payback-period number.
Energy-as-a-Service / third-party ownership: Similar to the OpEx model used for solar, some BESS providers offer arrangements where a third party owns and maintains the system, and the facility pays only for the energy services delivered (backup availability, peak shaving) at a rate below the value of the savings generated — removing the upfront capital question entirely, at the cost of a smaller net margin captured by the facility owner.
Whichever financing route you evaluate, build your ROI model around the actual cash flow structure you’d be entering into, not a generic “total system cost” assumption that may not match how you’ll actually pay for it.
A Simplified ROI Calculation Framework
| Step | What to Calculate | Data You Need |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Annual diesel cost avoided | Litres/hour × hours/day × operating days × diesel price |
| 2 | Annual demand-charge savings | Peak kW reduction × demand charge rate (your tariff) |
| 3 | Annual arbitrage savings (if applicable) | kWh shifted × (peak rate − off-peak rate) |
| 4 | Total annual savings | Sum of Steps 1–3 |
| 5 | Net system cost | CapEx − any available financing/incentive |
| 6 | Simple payback period | Net system cost ÷ Total annual savings |
| 7 | Lifetime value | Total annual savings × system design life, adjusted for degradation |
Common Mistakes That Distort BESS ROI Calculations
- Ignoring demand charges and only counting energy-charge (per-kWh) savings, which understates the benefit for MT/HT industrial tariffs
- Using a single “average” diesel price instead of the price actually paid, especially where bulk fuel purchasing agreements exist
- Overestimating outage hours based on a bad month rather than a representative annual average
- Underestimating the cost of downtime for automated production lines, where even brief interruptions cause measurable losses
- Failing to model battery degradation over the system’s life, leading to overly optimistic long-term savings projections
Frequently Asked Questions
What payback period is considered good for a BESS in Bangladesh? This depends entirely on a facility’s diesel reliance, demand-charge exposure, and outage frequency. Sites with heavy generator dependence and frequent outages tend to see materially shorter payback periods than sites with stable grid power and light backup needs — which is why a site-specific audit is essential rather than relying on a generic published number.
Does BESS ROI improve if I also have solar? Yes, in almost all cases, because the battery can store free solar generation instead of relying solely on paid grid electricity, improving both the savings rate and the system’s overall utilization.
How do I account for battery degradation in my ROI model? Apply a conservative annual capacity reduction (commonly modeled around 2–3% per year for LiFePO4) to your savings projection across the system’s design life, rather than assuming flat output for the full period.
Should I include demand-charge savings in my calculation? Yes — for MT, HT, and EHT industrial tariffs with a demand-charge component, peak shaving via BESS is often a significant, distinct savings source separate from energy-charge savings, and omitting it understates the true ROI.
Can I calculate BESS ROI without a generator currently installed? Yes — in that case, your savings sources shift toward demand-charge reduction, energy arbitrage, and avoided downtime cost rather than diesel-fuel avoidance.
Should I commission an independent energy audit before requesting BESS proposals? It’s generally a good idea. An independent audit of your load profile, demand-charge history, and current backup costs gives you a neutral baseline to evaluate competing vendor proposals against, rather than relying solely on the assumptions embedded in a single supplier’s quotation.
Key Takeaways
- BESS ROI should be calculated from your own site data — diesel consumption, demand charges, and outage pattern — not a generic industry average.
- The strongest BESS business cases combine multiple savings sources: fuel avoidance, demand-charge reduction, arbitrage, and avoided downtime.
- Diesel at ~৳115/litre and electricity tariffs at ~৳10.63/kWh (2026) make the financial case for BESS stronger than in past years.
- Pairing BESS with solar typically shortens payback further.
- A proper ROI model should account for battery degradation and compare against the realistic ongoing cost of the status quo.
Get a Custom ROI Model for Your Facility
Fakir Technologies builds site-specific BESS feasibility and ROI models for industrial and commercial clients in Bangladesh, based on your actual energy bills, generator data, and outage history. Learn more about our Battery Energy Storage Systems, browse our Top 10 BESS Manufacturers in Bangladesh overview, and contact our energy solutions team for a free ROI assessment.