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Hayati Group — a Bangladesh-based technology and industrial automation company — took part in the inauguration ceremony of the Chattogram–Dhaka Oil Transfer Pipeline Project (CDPL) and is contributing its expertise in telecommunications and control systems to support the operation of the strategic fuel infrastructure.
The CDPL pipeline, stretching about 249 km from Chattogram’s Padma Oil Company Limited terminal in Patenga to Dhaka, was formally inaugurated on 16 August 2025 by Muhammad Fauzul Kabir Khan, Adviser to the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources, marking a major milestone in the nation’s energy distribution network
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the ceremony and in ongoing project work, Hayati Group has been involved in implementing

At the ceremony and in ongoing project work, Hayati Group has been involved in implementing telecommunication and control systems that help manage real-time monitoring and secure operations of the pipeline:
Telecom Infrastructure: Ensuring reliable communication links along the pipeline route so that data and signals from remote stations reach central control safely and quickly.
Control Systems & Automation: Supporting automation, monitoring and supervisory systems (including SCADA-style functions) that allow operators to track pressure, flow and safety indicators.
Integration with Operations: Helping link field equipment with centralized control systems for improved response and seamless operational oversight.
Hayati Group’s participation in both the technical work and the official program highlights the increasing role of domestic technology firms in major infrastructure projects that combine industrial automation with critical national services.
The CDPL project, implemented by the Bangladesh Petroleum Corporation (BPC) with the help of the Bangladesh Army’s 24th Engineering Construction Brigade, marks a shift toward modern, cost-effective fuel transmission in the country. Inauguration of the pipeline is expected to reduce delivery time from upwards of 48 hours to about a third of that and cut annual fuel transport costs significantly.
With energy demand rising across Bangladesh, and telecommunications and control systems becoming central to infrastructure safety and reliability, Hayati Group’s involvement represents a convergence of local technological capability with national development needs.