• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
08 December 2025

Air Pollution Research Center Opens at Osh State University with Japanese Support

A new Inter-Institutional Research Center for Air Pollution Studies (IRCAPS) has been inaugurated at Osh State University in southern Kyrgyzstan.

The center is part of a five-year joint project between Osh State University and the Tokyo University of Science. Funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST), the $5 million initiative includes full provision of technical equipment for the facility.

The opening ceremony, held on November 18, was attended by Professor Nobutoshi Nawa, a leading scientist from the Tokyo University of Science, and Nishigato Kotaro, JICA’s representative in Kyrgyzstan.

Osh State University Rector Kudaiberdi Kojobekov stated that the center’s establishment represents a new phase in scientific and educational collaboration between Kyrgyzstan and Japan.

The center will focus on studying the health impacts of air pollution. Monitoring equipment will be installed both indoors and outdoors in residential areas to assess air quality in Osh, Bishkek, and other regions. Japanese scientists will collaborate directly with Kyrgyz researchers, and the resulting data will be used to formulate policy recommendations for relevant institutions and stakeholders.

The project is being carried out in coordination with the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Natural Resources, Ecology, and Technical Supervision, the Hydrometeorological Service, the International Higher Medical School, the Osh City Administration, and various international partners.

Air pollution remains a critical issue in Kyrgyzstan, particularly in its largest urban centers, Bishkek and Osh. Key sources include the widespread use of coal for heating and vehicle exhaust emissions.

Most Kazakhstani Citizens Fear Decline in Living Standards Due to Tax Reform

A majority of Kazakhstanis expect a planned increase in value-added tax (VAT) to negatively impact their standard of living, triggering higher prices, rising unemployment, and increased pressure on businesses, according to a survey conducted by the DEMOSCOPE public opinion monitoring agency.

The results show that 61.4% of respondents believe the VAT hike from 12% to 16% beginning January 1, 2026, will reduce their quality of life. Of those, 32.4% anticipate a significant decline, while 29% expect a slight deterioration. Meanwhile, 20.6% believe the change will have no impact, and just 9% believe it will improve their living standards.

Government officials have framed the VAT increase as necessary to boost budget revenues, stabilize the economy, and finance social spending. However, respondents overwhelmingly believe the reform will primarily benefit the state (63.8%) and wealthy citizens (27.9%). In contrast, only 10.2% think businesses will benefit, while 3.3% expect gains for the middle class and just 2% for low-income citizens. Additionally, 19.2% said no one would benefit, and 2.4% believe everyone will benefit.

Respondents also identified several expected negative outcomes. A majority, 65.5%, expect a rise in prices for goods and services. Another 27.3% predict a reduction in the number of small and medium-sized enterprises, 26.5% foresee rising unemployment, and 19.6% anticipate growth in the shadow economy and tax evasion. Among entrepreneurs, 70.5% view the reform negatively.

The VAT hike is seen as particularly detrimental to small and medium-sized businesses: 63.6% believe it will harm the sector, 14.8% foresee no impact, and only 10.3% predict a positive outcome.

Overall, 52.8% of respondents expressed a negative view of the reform, while 33.4% were neutral and just 7.8% were positive.

Nevertheless, some respondents did see potential benefits: 18.2% believe the reform will increase tax revenues, and 9.4% think it will improve living standards. A further 12.6% said they expect no significant changes.

The findings suggest that many Kazakhstani citizens view the tax reform as a policy that favors the government and affluent elites, while placing disproportionate pressure on businesses and vulnerable population groups.

As previously reported by The Times of Central Asia, in early October, Finance Minister Mady Takiev stated that authorities had identified suspected underreporting of taxable income by more than 260,000 businesses across the country.

Kazakhstan Enters the Global Rare Earth Metals Arena

Kazakhstan ranks among the global leaders in proven rare earth metals (REM) reserves. Until recently, this fact was often accompanied by the familiar phrase “underutilized potential.” Today, the country is rapidly shifting from being a raw material supplier to a strategic actor capable of influencing critical material supply chains.

Amid intensifying global competition for resources, Kazakhstan is steadily establishing itself in the rare earth market. Central to this transformation is the state-owned mining company Tau-Ken Samruk, which is expanding aggressively both domestically and internationally.

Rare Earth Potential

Kazakhstan recently announced the discovery of a deposit containing strategically significant minerals, including cerium, lanthanum, neodymium, and yttrium, with total reserves estimated at multi-million tons. These materials are vital for modern industrial production and technological development.

To date, over 100 deposits of rare and rare-earth elements have been identified in Kazakhstan, including Kurumsak, Bala-Sauskandyk, Akbulak, Kundybay, and Verkhnee-Espe. The country currently produces 19 of the 34 known rare earth elements.

Kazakhstan possesses a unique combination of advantages: vast reserves, strategic geographic location, political stability, and a pivot toward processing and manufacturing high-value-added products.

Where once the country focused primarily on extraction and minimal processing, the current strategy is fundamentally different. Kazakhstan is now aiming to build a full-scale industrial chain, positioning itself as an alternative hub in a market long dominated by China. This is particularly notable as diversification efforts by the U.S., European Union, Japan, and South Korea have progressed slowly.

In short, Kazakhstan is quickly gaining strategic “rare earth” agency. A recent example is the case of the Severny Katpar and Verkhniy Kairakty tungsten deposits. In 2018, China’s Xiamen Tungsten expressed interest, but withdrew without signing legally binding agreements. In 2025, Tau-Ken Samruk signed an agreement with U.S.-based Cove Capital to develop the same assets.

This development underscores a larger trend: Kazakhstan is no longer viewed as a peripheral resource supplier, but rather as a contested zone in the U.S.-China competition for critical materials.

Global Expansion

According to Nurlan Zhakupov, chairman of the board of the Samruk-Kazyna sovereign wealth fund, Kazakhstan intends to deepen its involvement in the global REM market by processing not only domestic materials but also raw inputs from third countries.

Tau-Ken Samruk has launched geological exploration projects for rare earths in Rwanda and Afghanistan.

“Tau-Ken Samruk is actively engaging with foreign partners,” Zhakupov noted. “We’ve signed an agreement with a Rwandan government agency and identified five target areas. Entry requires establishing a joint venture with a Rwandan state-owned company.”

Africa is emerging as a significant REM source, with countries like Burundi already engaging in commercial mining. British firm Rainbow Rare Earths began operations at the Gakara mine in 2017.

Kazakhstan’s exploration efforts in Rwanda aim to secure raw inputs for domestic processing. Collaboration with Rwanda’s Mines, Petroleum and Gas Board includes evaluating beryllium sales for Kazatomprom.

During his official visit to Kazakhstan, Rwandan President Paul Kagame expressed interest in Kazakhstani technologies, particularly in energy, mining, and mineral processing.

However, operations in Africa come with risks. Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo only signed a peace agreement in June 2025 under U.S. auspices. The accord reportedly granted American access to the region’s strategic minerals, including coltan and cobalt, but in Rwanda, activities remain exploratory and constrained by security conditions.

Afghanistan also holds significant REM reserves, including lanthanum, cerium, neodymium, lithium, and copper. Kazakhstan has expressed interest in exploring these resources. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, Afghanistan’s mineral wealth may be worth $1 trillion to $3 trillion, with REM reserves alone estimated at around 1.4 million tons. One of the largest deposits is in Khaneshin, Helmand Province.

Nevertheless, political instability, rugged terrain, and inadequate infrastructure continue to hinder extraction efforts.

“We are also working in Afghanistan. We’ve taken samples from two areas with promising geological results. While extraction is not yet under discussion, we’re in dialogue with potential local partners regarding licensing,” Zhakupov stated.

Kazakhstan may face competition in Afghanistan. In May 2025, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk announced Moscow’s readiness to support REM extraction in the country, including conducting comprehensive geological surveys.

The U.S. has also maintained interest. In 2017, then-President Trump and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani discussed the potential American development of Afghan REM resources. Those talks stalled following the Taliban’s return to power.

Despite the high risks and modest short-term gains, experts suggest Kazakhstan will continue to pursue a long-term strategy. This includes integrating geological exploration, processing, and international cooperation to bolster its global REM standing.

Planting Trees to Heal Old Wounds: Can a Desert Forest Save the Aral’s Last Residents?

In the Aralkum Desert, afforestation campaigns have multiplied since the early 2000s. They are meant to slow the sandstorms, temper a rapidly warming climate, and protect the health of those still living in the shadow of the Aral Sea. But the promised results have not appeared yet.

The road from Aralsk to Aiteke Bi cuts through a palette of ochre and dust. Trucks drift forward in pale clouds, dragging the desert behind them like a long train. In these villages scattered along the former shoreline of the Aral Sea, the wind never leaves. It is abrasive, restless, and a witness to a vanished water body that once cooled the hottest corner of Kazakhstan. Respiratory diseases now run through family histories, and doctors say they can recognize lungs shaped by ecological collapse.

At the polyclinic in Aiteke Bi, patients describe the same symptoms with weary precision: breath shortening too quickly, coughs that never fully recede, a fatigue that never seems to lift. Nuralay, 52, says the storms “get into the house, into the throat, into everything.” She admits she cannot remember a season without irritation in her chest. For Dr. Kuanyshqar Assilov, who has watched the pattern deepen for years, the cause is unmistakable: decades of airborne salts, pesticide residues, and industrial chemicals lifted from the dried seabed of the Aral Sea.

In Aralsk, sand covers everything

Marat Narbaev, executive director of the International Fund to Save the Aral Sea (IFAS), recounts the disaster’s origins with a mixture of resignation and habit. He traces it back to the 1960s, when Soviet planners diverted the Amu Darya and Syr Darya to feed cotton monocultures. “The cotton was used to make clothing for soldiers and ammunition,” he says. Today, he argues, the basin faces two pressures: “climate change and demographic growth. Fifty million inhabitants… soon seventy.”

In this landscape, the promise of restoring the region through afforestation has acquired symbolic weight. Saxaul trees – hardy, grey-green, capable of surviving in brackish soils – are planted by the millions on the exposed seabed. Officially, they are meant to stabilize sand, calm storms, and cool the surface. Unofficially, they carry the hope that life here might once be breathable again.

Survivalist tree?

On paper, the saxaul is a biological survivalist: roots plunging more than 30 feet deep, the ability to stabilize dunes, lower surface salinity, and grow dense enough within a few years to slow the wind. In Aralkum, a village east of Aralsk, residents praise the planting that lines a dozen houses. “It really worked, the storms became more bearable,” a man says. Then he shrugs: more trees should have been planted. “We asked for the other side of the village, but there’s no funding left.” Nowadays, half of the trees have died, and the rest lie buried beneath the dunes.

In Aralkum village, half of the surviving trees barely emerge from the sand

Sometimes, past plantations have almost zero trees left. According to a 2021 study, Aralkum is one of the few sites where more than half the trees survived. In Karateren, a former fishing village, it is almost impossible to imagine that sixty hectares were planted ten years ago: livestock trampled the seedlings, and saline soils choked the rest.

Across twenty-four plots studied by researchers, only four have survival rates above 40%. The causes repeat themselves: unsuitable soils, lack of irrigation during the first years, extreme aridity, and, in several cases, mismanagement.

The USAID “oasis” turned into a saxaul cemetery

Near the Barsakelmes reserve, a 500-hectare oasis once funded by USAID has been abandoned since U.S. cuts in 2021. The dead saxauls stand like weathered gravestones in the sand.

Mismanagement goes on…

From her small office in Aralsk, Aynur Rysbava, director of the NGO Aral Tenizi, tries to correct these failures. “The programs are far from optimal,” she says. She explains best practices that have been ignored for years: hand-planting, early-season watering, fertilizers, and avoiding monocultures. In one neighborhood nursery, she grows apple, cherry, and pear trees directly from the sand. Her recommendations, she laments, are routinely dismissed.

Aynur Rysbaeva, from the association Aral Tenizi, participating in the IFAS plantation on November 5

Thus, new projects keep repeating the same mistakes: seeds dropped by drones onto empty desert, plantations set up dozens of kilometers from the nearest house, and no one left to tend to them once the trucks pull away. Reaching the latest IFAS site means driving fifty kilometers south of the last village – and getting lost twice on the way. IFAS says 18,000 saxauls were planted that day, a few by students, activists, and bureaucrats performing for the journalists’ cameras. The project invites skepticism. Survival rates, already thin, collapse when no one remains after the lenses turn elsewhere.

… and health worsens

Meanwhile, the storms do not wait for the trees to grow. Some days, Lazzat, 49, can barely speak; the air of Aiteke Bi scrapes her lungs. “When I went to a sanatorium in Almaty, the problems disappeared; but they came back as soon as I returned,” she whispers. “More and more people are getting sick”, she adds.

The air is indeed becoming unbreathable. Atmospheric dust concentrations are reported to be about 32 times higher than sanitary norms in parts of the Aral region, according to a study published by IFAS. Cadmium – a toxic metal found in fertilizers and industrial waste – reaches levels significantly above the national average. Lead, mercury, and arsenic remain embedded in the desert’s brittle salt crusts. With the wind that nothing stops, these substances were detected in human blood and tissues, contributing to cancers and neurological delays in children.

In Aiteke Bi, Kuanyshkul Dauletiyarkyzy runs a center for children with autism spectrum disorders. “There are more every year,” she says. Her hypothesis is bleak: “Mothers eat food and drink water contaminated with plastics.” She had no idea that some hard metals and pesticides were encrusted in the desert.

Wind is not the only vector. Water is changing, too. Demographic pressure has expanded cultivated land and increased water use. In the Kyzylorda region, 90% of all available water goes mainly to rice. Because the irrigation canals are the same cracked, leaking conduits built in Soviet times, almost half the water pumped never reaches the fields, President Tokayev said in his State of the Nation speech in September 2022. The rest evaporates or seeps into the ground. As the Syr Darya’s flow diminishes, the quality of irrigation water deteriorates. Salinity has doubled since 2017, according to the same study published by IFAS.

Blind spots 

Yet the full health impacts remain obscure. There is little monitoring, no long-term epidemiological data, and no systematic water testing. “We didn’t really have a good database to check all this information,” admits Toheeb Olalekan Oladejo, an assistant researcher at Nazarbayev University and co-author of a study on environmental health.

Because the environmental crises overlap, it is difficult to isolate any single pollutant from the cocktail that saturates the air and water. Doctors tend to stay vague. When Nuralay sought treatment in Astana, hospital staff suggested that her mysterious allergy might be linked to the poor air quality blowing in from the Aral.

Another blind spot is mental health. The few studies available paint an alarming picture: diminished memory and attention, anxiety, depression, and high somatic distress scores. “A lot of people are suffering from this type of mental health issue, disproportionately compared to other cities,” says Toheeb Olalekan Oladejo. According to Dr. Kuanyshqar Assilov, schools in Kyzylorda are already raising red flags over increasing psychological distress among young people. Whether they are caused by hard metals, climate change, or socio-economic conditions, “we cannot say”, Toheeb Olalekan Oladejo admits.

Saxaul can improve human health indirectly by stabilizing toxic sediments, lowering dust emissions near plantations, and slightly improving air quality. However, in this context, the saxaul plantations also play a symbolic role: a psychological buffer, an illusion of repair. A small forest can’t stop a crisis of this scale, but it can offer a narrative of progress, a form of collective resilience, perhaps even a placebo. When asked whether Kazakhstan will truly manage to plant more than a million trees, Marat Narbaev pauses before replying: “What else can we do?” The answer captures the dilemma: the plantations persist not because they will fix the problem, but because doing nothing feels impossible.

Car and Real Estate Sellers in Kazakhstan to Receive Payment Only After Buyer Rights Registered

Kazakhstan is preparing to introduce a new payment system for vehicle and real estate transactions, in which funds deposited via banks will be temporarily blocked until ownership rights are officially registered in the buyer’s name.

The initiative, known as the “Safe Transaction” system, is being developed jointly by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Ministry of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Development. A pilot launch is expected soon, with a full-scale rollout planned for April next year.

The system was discussed during the first meeting of the working group on the integration of the digital tenge into public finance operations. The digital tenge (national currency) refers to marked digital budget funds designated for specific contractual purposes. These funds cannot be converted into cash or conventional non-cash forms and are unblocked only after work or services are completed and verified or once contract terms are fully met. The mechanism aims to automate oversight of targeted budget spending and mitigate embezzlement risks.

Pilot projects involving digital tenge have already revealed several technical challenges. For example, in the road construction sector, the absence of a unified methodology for standardizing goods, services, and materials complicates implementation. Additional requirements include digitizing design and estimate documentation, integrating the platform with verified supplier databases, and introducing transaction verification protocols and cost reconciliation tools.

Binur Zhalenov, advisor to the chairman of the National Bank, noted that the pilot phase exposed significant discrepancies in pricing for some materials and services, which require industry-specific evaluation to assess properly.

The digital tenge is technically prepared for certain types of public procurement and is expected to improve transparency in financial transactions. Authorities anticipate that it will enhance budget revenue collection, reduce tax-related risks, and curb the use of fictitious financial schemes.

Over the medium term, the digital tenge is projected to be used in the implementation of at least 100 government projects. The National Bank officially announced its launch just over a year ago.

What Prevents Kazakh Women from Using Contraception

Kazakhstani researchers are once again drawing attention to a sensitive yet vital issue: women’s access to contraception and the broader state of reproductive health. Experts at Ranking.kz describe this matter as socially significant, directly affecting public health, quality of life, and the country’s demographic trends.

According to the National Statistics Bureau (NSB), the unmet need for contraception among women with partners in Kazakhstan continues to rise. In 2024, the rate reached 18%, up from just 9.8% in 2015.

The NSB attributes this unmet need to two main reasons cited by women:

  • 12.5% said they do not want children “at this particular moment”; and
  • 5.5% said they do not plan to become pregnant at all, “as they already have children”.

However, analysts argue that the actual reasons are far more complex, encompassing unstable relationships, financial hardship, childfree lifestyle choices, and medical risks. The NSB’s approach, which treats contraception solely as a tool for regulating fertility, largely overlooks its crucial role in preventing sexually transmitted infections.

Access to contraception is becoming more limited. In 2024, only 45.2% of women who wished to use contraceptives were able to do so, a decline from 55.7% in 2014. The reasons for use remain narrowly defined: delaying pregnancy or avoiding it entirely.

The study also highlights stark regional disparities. Western Kazakhstan presents the most concerning figures. In the Aktobe region, 26.7% of women in partnerships report wanting but being unable to use contraception. The Atyrau region follows closely with 25.6%, then West Kazakhstan at 24%, and Astana at 23%. For comparison, dissatisfaction with access was just 11.7% nationally in 2015.

The unmet need is most acute among the youngest women:

  • 20-24 years old – 27.8%; and
  • 15-19 years old – 25.8%.

Substantial figures are also seen in older age brackets:

  • 25-29 years old – 25%;
  • 30-34 years old – 21.5%; and
  • 35-39 years old – 16.9%.

Globally, the United Nations reports an unmet need for contraception at 15% in 2024. Contributing factors include religious and cultural attitudes, economic barriers, lack of awareness, and restrictions imposed by partners or family members.

Despite increasing demand, only 39.7% of Kazakhstani women of reproductive age, around 1.9 million individuals, currently use contraceptives. While this represents the highest number in recent years, the gap between need and access remains significant.