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Understanding how to initiate arbitration in Bangladesh is essential for any business or legal practitioner facing a commercial dispute that falls under an arbitration clause. The Arbitration Act 2001 governs the process, establishing clear requirements for notices, arbitrator appointments, and procedural timelines that parties must follow. Bangladesh offers two principal forums, institutional arbitration through the Bangladesh International Arbitration Centre (BIAC) and ad hoc arbitration managed by the parties themselves, each with distinct procedural pathways. This guide walks through every step from reviewing your arbitration agreement to constituting the tribunal, complete with checklists, a sample notice template, and a practical comparison of BIAC versus ad hoc proceedings.
Yes, provided a valid arbitration agreement exists between the parties. The arbitration process in Bangladesh follows a well-defined sequence governed by the Arbitration Act 2001.
The sections below break each of these steps into actionable detail, with statutory references, timelines, and templates.
Before drafting any notice, a prospective claimant must confirm that the dispute is arbitrable and that the arbitration agreement is enforceable. Under Section 9 of the Arbitration Act 2001 Bangladesh, an arbitration agreement must be “in writing.” The Act adopts a broad definition: an exchange of letters, faxes, or any communication that records the agreement satisfies this requirement.
Beyond the writing requirement, a well-drafted arbitration clause should specify several critical elements. Ambiguity in any of these areas can delay the arbitration process in Bangladesh by weeks or even months.
Pre-initiation contract review checklist:
If the clause is pathological, for example, referencing a non-existent institution or contradicting itself on seat and law, industry observers expect that the respondent may challenge jurisdiction early. Addressing these issues before serving the notice of arbitration significantly reduces procedural risk.
The notice of arbitration Bangladesh practitioners serve is the document that formally commences the arbitration. Under the Arbitration Act 2001, arbitral proceedings commence on the date the respondent receives this notice. Getting it right, in form, content, and method of delivery, is critical.
While the Arbitration Act 2001 does not prescribe a rigid template, Section 21 states that arbitral proceedings commence when the respondent receives “a request to refer the dispute to arbitration.” Drawing from the Act, BIAC filing requirements, and established international practice, the notice should include the following elements at a minimum:
For BIAC institutional proceedings, the request for arbitration Bangladesh claimants submit must also comply with any additional requirements published in the BIAC Rules, including the filing of a registration fee alongside the request.
Note: This sample is provided for illustration only and does not constitute legal advice. Parties should tailor the notice to their specific arbitration clause and seek professional guidance.
NOTICE OF ARBITRATION Date: [Date] To: [Full legal name and address of Respondent] From: [Full legal name and address of Claimant] 1. Arbitration Agreement. This Notice is served pursuant to [Clause [X] of the [Contract Name] dated [Date]] / [the Arbitration Agreement dated [Date]], a copy of which is attached as Annexure A. 2. Summary of Dispute. [Brief factual narrative, e. g. , “The Respondent has failed to deliver goods conforming to specification under Purchase Order No. [X], resulting in losses of BDT [amount]. “] 3. Relief Sought. The Claimant seeks: (a) damages of BDT [amount]; (b) interest at the contractual / statutory rate; (c) costs of the arbitration; and (d) such further relief as the Tribunal deems just. 4.
Number and Appointment of Arbitrators. The Claimant proposes a [sole arbitrator / tribunal of three]. [If three-member panel: “The Claimant hereby nominates [Name, qualifications, address] as its party-appointed arbitrator, and invites the Respondent to nominate its arbitrator within [30] days. “] 5. Seat and Language. The seat of arbitration shall be [Dhaka, Bangladesh] and the language of proceedings shall be [English / Bangla], as provided in the arbitration agreement.
Proper service of the notice of arbitration is not merely a formality, it determines the commencement date and can affect limitation periods. Consider the following when serving your notice:
One of the most consequential decisions when initiating arbitration is whether to proceed under institutional rules at BIAC or to run the process ad hoc. The choice affects cost predictability, the speed of arbitrator appointment, and the degree of administrative support available throughout the proceedings. The comparison table below summarises the key differences.
| Criteria | BIAC (Institutional) | Ad Hoc |
|---|---|---|
| Where to file | BIAC secretariat in Dhaka; submit a Request for Arbitration with supporting documents and registration fee. | No secretariat, parties coordinate appointments and administration directly between themselves. |
| Appointment method | BIAC appoints or administers appointments under its rules if parties fail to agree within the prescribed period. | Parties agree; if they fail, court assistance under the Arbitration Act 2001 (application to the Chief Justice). |
| Rules and procedural certainty | BIAC Rules govern procedure; set timelines and clear administrative benchmarks. | Parties must agree on applicable rules (UNCITRAL, ICC, or bespoke) or default to the Act; more flexible but higher risk of procedural disputes. |
| Cost predictability | More predictable, published administrative fee schedule and arbitrator fee scales. | Potentially lower administrative fees but arbitrators’ costs vary widely; disagreements on procedure can increase overall expenditure. |
| Case management and neutrality | Institutional case management, venue support, and a neutral appointing authority. | Greater party autonomy; more flexible seat choice but fewer administrative safeguards against delay. |
To commence proceedings at BIAC, a claimant must submit a Request for Arbitration to the BIAC secretariat. The BIAC arbitration rules require the following:
BIAC will acknowledge receipt, serve the Request on the respondent, and set a deadline for the respondent’s Answer and counter-nomination (if a three-member tribunal is specified). Where parties fail to agree on an arbitrator, BIAC itself acts as the appointing authority.
Ad hoc arbitration in Bangladesh may be preferable where the parties have a sophisticated relationship, wish to minimise institutional fees, or where the arbitration agreement specifically provides for it. However, the absence of institutional support places a greater burden on the parties to agree on procedural rules, appointment timelines, and logistics. If the respondent is uncooperative, the claimant must resort to court-assisted appointment, a process that can be slower than BIAC’s internal mechanism. Early indications suggest that parties choosing ad hoc arbitration benefit most when they adopt the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules by reference in the underlying clause, as these provide a self-contained procedural framework without requiring institutional administration.
The appointment of arbitrator Bangladesh procedures under the Act are designed to balance party autonomy with safeguards against delay. The Act provides a tiered approach: party agreement first, statutory default second, and court intervention as a last resort.
The most straightforward route is where both parties follow the procedure set out in their arbitration agreement. Common models include:
Where parties cannot agree on an arbitrator, whether because the respondent refuses to nominate, the two party-appointed arbitrators cannot agree on a presiding arbitrator, or the clause is ambiguous, the Arbitration Act 2001 provides statutory fallback mechanisms.
Industry observers expect that court-assisted appointments typically add four to eight weeks to the process, depending on the court’s docket. However, the mechanism is essential, without it, a recalcitrant respondent could prevent the arbitration from ever getting off the ground.
Even after appointment, issues can arise. The Act allows parties to challenge an arbitrator on grounds of lack of independence, impartiality, or qualifications (Sections 13 and 14). Where an arbitrator becomes unable or unwilling to act, the vacancy is filled following the same procedure used for the original appointment. Practitioners should be aware of the following practical scenarios:
Realistic timeline expectations are critical for commercial planning. The table below outlines typical durations for each phase when initiating arbitration in Bangladesh, with ranges reflecting the difference between cooperative and contested proceedings.
| Phase | BIAC (Institutional) | Ad Hoc |
|---|---|---|
| Serve Notice / File Request | Day 0 | Day 0 |
| Respondent’s Answer and counter-nomination | 15–30 days (per BIAC Rules) | 30 days (typical contractual deadline) |
| Arbitrator appointment (cooperative) | 2–4 weeks from Answer deadline | 2–4 weeks if parties agree |
| Arbitrator appointment (contested / court-assisted) | 4–6 weeks (BIAC acts as appointing authority) | 6–12 weeks (requires application to Chief Justice) |
| First Procedural Order / Preliminary Conference | 1–2 weeks after constitution | 2–4 weeks after constitution |
| Interim relief application (if needed) | Can be filed with courts at any time from Day 0 | Can be filed with courts at any time from Day 0 |
| Estimated total: Notice to First Hearing | 8–14 weeks | 10–22 weeks |
These timelines are based on practitioner experience and reported averages. Actual durations vary depending on the complexity of the dispute, the cooperation of the respondent, and court docket congestion where court-assisted appointments are required.
A party initiating arbitration may need urgent court intervention before the tribunal is constituted. The Arbitration Act 2001 Bangladesh expressly preserves the court’s authority to grant interim measures in support of arbitration proceedings, regardless of whether the tribunal has been formed.
When to seek interim relief during the initiation phase:
Applications for interim relief are filed in the relevant district court or, for international arbitrations with a foreign seat, in accordance with the law of the seat. The likely practical effect of Bangladesh’s ongoing court modernisation efforts, including the Commercial Court Ordinance, is that dedicated commercial benches will handle these applications more efficiently, though the core provisions of the Arbitration Act 2001 remain unchanged. Practitioners should note that seeking court-ordered interim relief does not waive the right to arbitrate; Section 7A of the Act makes this clear.
Understanding the cost structure helps parties budget effectively. The main cost categories when initiating arbitration include:
Pre-launch checklist, confirm these items before serving your notice:
Initiating arbitration in Bangladesh is a structured, statute-driven process. By following the steps set out in this guide, verifying your arbitration agreement, drafting a compliant notice, choosing the right forum, and preparing for arbitrator appointment, you lay the groundwork for an efficient and enforceable proceeding.
For further guidance on what happens once the tribunal is constituted, see our detailed guide on the preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings. For a broader overview of how dispute resolution mechanisms work in commercial contracts, including mediation and litigation alternatives, our separate resource covers the full landscape.
If you are ready to commence arbitration or need advice on your specific clause and dispute, find a qualified arbitration lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory to receive tailored professional assistance.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Suhan Khan, FCIArb at ACCORD CHAMBERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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