• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00194 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10896 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
09 December 2025

Experts Warn Central Asia Faces Chronic Water Shortage by 2028

Central Asia is heading toward a severe water crisis as climate change, population growth, and outdated infrastructure put increasing pressure on the region’s water resources, experts have warned.

At a recent roundtable on climate change and water management, Stanislav Pritchin, head of the Central Asia sector at the Russian Academy of Sciences, highlighted the growing threat.

Climate change is a major factor, as rising temperatures accelerate glacier melt – the primary source of freshwater in Central Asia. Meanwhile, rapid population growth is driving up demand. Uzbekistan, the region’s most populous country, has seen its population increase from 22 million in 1991 to an estimated 37.5 million in 2025. Across Central Asia, the total population is approaching 80 million.

Another challenge is outdated infrastructure. Pritchin noted that up to 50% of irrigation water is lost due to inefficient and aging systems. Moreover, the region lacks a strong institutional framework for managing water distribution and policy. While some cooperative projects exist – such as the joint construction of the Kambar-Ata hydropower plant – they are insufficient to address the broader crisis.

In response to these challenges, on February 19, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) approved a $125 million loan to help Uzbekistan improve water security, reduce losses, and enhance distribution efficiency.

The Climate-Smart Water Management Improvement Project aims to introduce advanced monitoring and management systems. Uzbekistan’s national water utility, Uzsuvtaminot, will implement digital technology to track water flow, minimize waste, and improve service delivery. The initiative will also establish a comprehensive inventory of water supply infrastructure and deploy a nationwide bulk flow metering and telemetry system.

“Uzbekistan’s water resources are under acute threat from climate change and inefficient usage,” said ADB Country Director for Uzbekistan, Kanokpan Lao-Araya. “ADB’s project introduces smart water management systems to improve water usage, reduce energy consumption, and increase operational efficiency to lower Uzbekistan’s carbon footprint.”

This initiative is part of Uzbekistan’s broader efforts to modernize infrastructure and prepare for future water challenges. However, experts caution that without stronger regional cooperation, no single country can fully resolve the crisis.

Simurgh Self-Help: Slavs and Tatars’ New Show Rethinks National Symbolism

“It’s interesting that in Western symbolism you never see a delicate female eagle,” notes Payam, one-half of the artist collective Slavs and Tatars, from his studio in Berlin. “But the central-Asian Simurgh is gender-fluid, metaphysical. It doesn’t belong to this world.”

The mythological figure of the Simurgh is the focus of Slavs and Tatars’ latest show at the gallery The Third Line in Dubai called “Simurgh Self-Help”. The show speaks of the importance of reclaiming and reframing cultural memories in a fractured world, and an invitation to think beyond the artificial, top-down confines of nationalism, to find cultural unity.

Slavs and Tatars Samovar Vacuum-formed plastic, acrylic paint; Image: Courtesy of the artist and The Third Line, Dubai

The exhibition extends a lineage of conceptual inquiry, drawing upon the mystical bird Simurgh, ever-present in Persian and Central Asia mythologies, as a counterpoint to the ubiquitous, secularized eagle of Western heraldry.

A constant companion of Zeus in Greek mythology, the eagle is a recurring symbol in the Western world: “Everywhere you look in the West, you find eagles,” notes Payam. “It’s on the German flag, on American football teams, on the Albanian flag. It’s a tired, secularized symbol, heavy with the weight of imperial history.” In contrast, the Simurgh exists on a different plane, one that rejects hierarchies in favor of collective transformation.

Slavs and Tatars Samovar Vacuum-formed plastic, acrylic paint; Image: Courtesy of the artist and The Third Line, Dubai

Today the Simurgh is going through a similar secularization to the Western eagle, with Turkish SIM cards and Azerbaijani soccer teams called Simurgh. “It’s easy, in some sense, for as an artist to take something which is very high and important, let’s say spiritual or religious, and make it make fun of it, bring it down in a caricatural way,” says Payam. “What’s very hard as an artist is to take something which has been debased and make it high again.”

In the show, we see works that go in either direction, presenting an alternative mythology, one that shows that cultures are fluid and interconnected. “Simurgh Self-Help,” which had previous iterations in Warsaw, Athens, and Baden-Baden, was originally started two years ago as a conceptual echo of Marcel Broodthaers’ Musée d’Art Moderne: Département des Aigles. This was a conceptual museum/artistic project created by the Belgian artist in 1968, full of artworks referenced by Slavs and Tatars in their show.

Slavs and Tatars, Soft Power_2023, Woolen Yarn; Image: Courtesy of the artist and The Third Line, Dubai

The Simurgh, Payam explains, traverses territories from Kazakhstan to Ukraine, yet remains absent in Poland. “It’s a question of defining a region not through imposed political structures but through the myths that bubble from the ground up,” remarks Payam. The Simurgh becomes a cipher for alternative cartographies, a challenge to the top-down imposition of nationhood.

If the eagle stands for conquest and dominance, the Simurgh stands for the dissolution of categories and unity with the whole. The myth, present in Attar’s poem The Conference of the Birds, speaks of a journey — a dissolution of the self in pursuit of the divine. “In the traditional story a number of birds seek the Simurgh,” Payam reflects, “and when they arrive, they find a pond where they can see their own reflections. This a very Sufi concept, by which God is within. They are the Simurgh. It’s an act of annihilating the ego, of merging with the infinite.”

Installation View, Slavs and Tatars, Simurgh Self-Help, 2025, The Third Line. Photo: Altamash Urooj

The exhibition unfolds through a number of glassworks, carpets, installations, and text-based works, in an interplay of languages that are both visual and textual. The craft element is very present, as the collective closely works with artisans with the idea of continuity: “We work with the same artisans repeatedly, ensuring quality and deepening relationships.”

Payam has recently come back to the cold temperatures of Berlin from the warmth of Jeddah to participate in the second edition of their Islamic Biennial. As Slavs and Tatars will also join the forthcoming first edition of the Bukhara Biennial, the artist is encouraged to reflect on how different versions of Islam enter the secular world and open up to the contemporary art public.

Installation View, Slavs and Tatars, Simurgh Self-Help, 2025, The Third Line. Photo: Altamash Urooj

“As artists, we have always been interested in religion as a repository of knowledge,” Payam asserts. “If you claim to be interested in knowledge, you cannot ignore the metaphysical. We have so many different types of knowledge, the rational, the mystical, the analytic, the emotional, the digestive even. You can’t say you are interested in one, and reject the others.”

Well, what a Simurgh-like thing to say.

U.S.-Funded Plane Carrying Some Central Asian Migrants Lands in Costa Rica

A total of 135 migrants, including people from Central Asia, have arrived in Costa Rica on a flight from the United States, where the Trump administration has promised mass deportations and has enlisted several Latin American countries as transit points for migrants being transferred to their countries of origin.

None of the migrants on the passenger plane that arrived at the international airport near the capital of San José on Thursday have been flagged by the United States as a security threat, said Omer Badilla, Costa Rica’s deputy interior minister.  Costa Rica is conducting its own checks, he said.

“They’re families, they’re people who don’t have any record” of criminal or allegedly criminal conduct, Badilla told local media. About half of the group are children.

Costa Rica has said the migrants will be held at a temporary facility in the south of the country for up to several weeks prior to their transfer to their countries of origin.

The government originally said it was expecting to receive 200 migrants on Thursday’s flight.

The operation is being supervised by the International Organization for Migration, a Geneva-based United Nations agency that will take care of the migrants while they are in transit, according to the Costa Rican government.  Human rights groups have expressed concern that deported migrants could face persecution in some cases if returned by force to their countries.

Obituary – Kristopher White: The Gentle Giant Who Inspired a Generation of Central Asian Scholars

Kristopher Dodge White, known to his friends simply as “Kris”, was a distinguished scholar, mentor, and friend, who dedicated two decades of his life to academia in Kazakhstan. Kris was a gentle giant, someone people naturally gravitated toward. Respected and loved by friends, colleagues and students alike, his personality left an indelible mark on everyone he met.

In terms of professional discipline, Kris was a geographer, having conducted undergraduate studies at Clark University and an MA and a PhD at the University of Connecticut. He established himself as a leading interdisciplinary scholar of Central Asia, advancing our understanding of post-Soviet transitions, environmental crises, and the interplay between human societies and their landscapes. Kris’s life work is a testament to the power of geography as a lens for understanding complex regional challenges. Future scholarship will undoubtedly build upon his illuminating insights into the interdependencies of nature, economy, and identity.

Kristopher White in his office at KIMEP, 2023

Kris was a prolific writer and researcher, devoting much of his work to the study of the Aral Sea and highlighting the ecological and social challenges of the region. His work excelled in weaving environmental and economic themes with cultural analysis. For example, he explored how the endangered snow leopard has become a symbolic linchpin for Kazakhstan’s national identity, ecotourism marketing, and international conservation agendas.

As an educator at KIMEP University since 2004, Kris helped shape a generation of Central Asian scholars through courses like Oil Geopolitics and The Aral Sea Crisis: A Geographical Perspective. His pedagogical approach—rooted in regional case studies —exemplified his commitment to place-based learning.

Back in Almaty

Beyond his professional work, Kris had an adventurous spirit. His love for travel took him across the globe, capturing the beauty of the world through his keen eye for photography. Whether exploring the vast Kazakh steppe, documenting the remnants of the Aral Sea, or wandering through historic cities, he found joy in sharing stories through his lens. He later developed and taught a course on photojournalism at KIMEP.

Kris and I overlapped at KIMEP for four years (2004-08). I always appreciated that irrespective of the challenges of any given day, he was an oasis of calm and fun, liking nothing better than to unwind over a glass of Kazakh beer or Georgian wine. Kris was the epitome of a true friend who would never let you down, someone who always had your back and you had his ear. We made several unforgettable road trips throughout Central Asia, particularly in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan.

Kristopher White with Donnacha Ó Beacháin, 2023

Kris passed away while visiting his family in Florida. Today, the 21st February, would have been his 56th birthday. He had so many plans for the future, and it’s heartbreaking that he won’t see them come to fruition. Those who knew him will forever remember his kindness and wisdom. His legacy lives on in the minds he inspired, the friendships he nurtured, and the body of work he leaves behind, all of which will resonate for many years to come.

Ukrainian Drone Strike Disrupts Kazakhstan’s Oil Exports

On February 17, Ukrainian drones struck the Kropotkinskaya oil pumping station, a key component of the pipeline of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) in Russia’s Krasnodar region. The CPC, a 1,500-kilometer pipeline, transports crude from Kazakhstan’s Tengiz field to the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk, a crucial hub for global exports. The attack, confirmed by CPC operators, resulted in the temporary shutdown of the Kropotkinskaya station, the largest such facility on Russian soil. No casualties or oil spills were reported. Ukrainian sources, including the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) and Special Operations Forces (SOF), claimed responsibility, citing the pipeline’s role in supporting Russia’s military-industrial complex.

The strike reportedly involved seven drones armed with high-explosive warheads, significantly damaging energy infrastructure, including a gas turbine unit and a substation. Russian authorities estimated a 30–40 percent reduction in CPC throughput for the next six to eight weeks, affecting global supply chains. While CPC pipeline operators have not disclosed a precise timeline for repairs, the anticipated disruptions will inevitably place additional pressure on global energy markets. The degree of damage inflicted raises questions about the vulnerability of Russian energy infrastructure and the efficacy of existing defense systems in preventing such attacks.

The CPC pipeline handles a substantial share of Kazakhstan’s oil exports. In 2023, it transported 63.5 million tons, or approximately 1.27 million barrels per day (bpd), with 90 percent of that volume originating in Kazakhstan. This pipeline disruption translates into a projected drop in Kazakh oil flows from 1.143 million bpd to an estimated range of 0.69 to 0.80 million bpd.

Consequently, Kazakhstan’s total crude exports—including volumes transported via alternative routes such as the Trans-Caspian corridor and rail—are expected to decline by up to 28.6 percent. The revenue impact could be severe given oil’s centrality to Kazakhstan’s economy. Even a short-term disruption will reverberate across multiple sectors, affecting fiscal revenues and potentially leading to a recalibration of investment strategies within the country’s energy sector.

Although Kazakhstan has sought to diversify its oil export routes since 2022, alternatives remain limited. The Trans-Caspian International Transport Route (TITR), connecting Kazakhstan to Azerbaijan via the Caspian Sea and then onward through the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline, carried just 1.8 million tons in 2023. This is but a fraction of CPC’s capacity. Other options, such as the Druzhba pipeline to Europe and rail transport, are constrained by infrastructure bottlenecks and geopolitical risks. Given these constraints, Astana has increasingly prioritized the expansion of maritime oil exports, including investments in new tankers and port facilities. However, logistical challenges, cost considerations, and geopolitical uncertainties continue to complicate Kazakhstan’s ability to execute a seamless transition away from Russian transit routes.

The attack underscores the vulnerability of Russia’s energy infrastructure amid the ongoing war. Unlike previous Ukrainian strikes targeting refineries and storage depots, this is a direct hit on a critical transit corridor with transnational implications. The disruption may accelerate Astana’s long-term push for diversification, including investment in new tankers and expanded partnerships with U.S. and European firms. In light of these developments, Kazakhstan faces a delicate balancing act between maintaining its energy partnerships with Moscow and, at the same time, seeking to insulate itself from the geopolitical volatility associated with Russia’s ongoing conflict.

Russia’s response remains uncertain. Moscow could seek to downplay the attack to avoid signalling operational weaknesses, while it could also retaliate through cyber or kinetic strikes on Ukrainian energy infrastructure. It is not excluded that Moscow exerts economic pressure on Astana, given Kazakhstan’s reliance on Russian transit routes. This would complicate Kazakhstan’s efforts to pivot toward alternative markets. If the Russian government interprets this attack as an indication that its oil transit corridors are under systematic threat, it may reconsider security policies governing key infrastructure assets. For example, it could escalate military responses or deploy additional defensive measures.

Oil markets may see a marginal price increase in response to the CPC disruption, given that the pipeline carries roughly 1% of global crude supply. However, any sustained price movements will depend on the duration of repairs and broader geopolitical developments. Kazakhstan’s remaining exports may gain in value, but the overall revenue loss is unlikely to be offset. Major global energy traders may be moved to reassess more broadly their perceptions of risk surrounding critical energy corridors in the post-Soviet space. To do this would further complicate their economic forecasting models.

The strike on the CPC pipeline signals an escalation in the strategic calculus of the Ukraine war, with ripple effects for global energy flows. If future attacks target additional nodes of Russian transit infrastructure, Kazakhstan and other regional actors will face increasing pressure to rethink their energy security posture.

In the broader strategic context, this development could redefine energy alliances in Central Asia and reinforce existing trends toward diversification away from Russian-controlled infrastructure. A sustained wave of such attacks would likely provoke extensive recalibrations in both Russian security doctrine and Kazakhstani economic strategy, setting the stage for long-term shifts in the global energy supply chain.

Central Asian Migrants In Group Being Deported by U.S. to Costa Rica

A group of 200 migrants from Central Asia and India is scheduled to be flown from the United States to Costa Rica this week as part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration.   

Costa Rica’s presidency said in a statement that it was collaborating with the United States on the repatriation of migrants who were illegally in the U.S. and that the “first group” of 200 would be transferred from Juan Santamaria International Airport, near the capital of San José, to a temporary facility for migrants in the Costa Rican area of Corredores. The area is in the south of the country, near the border with Panama. 

The Costa Rican statement, which was issued on Monday, had said the U.S.-funded commercial flight was scheduled for Wednesday afternoon. However, several Costa Rican and international news reports said the flight was delayed until Thursday.

The statement did not identify the nationalities of the migrants from Central Asia, though Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chavez subsequently said they were from countries including Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Pakistan and India. The operation is being supervised by the International Organization for Migration, a Geneva-based United Nations agency that will take care of the migrants while they are in transit, according to the Costa Rican government.  

In a similar arrangement, Uzbek citizens are among a separate group of migrants from multiple countries who were recently flown from the United States to Panama prior to repatriation to their countries of origin. Panama has come under intense pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, who has threatened to seize the Panama Canal. It is difficult for the United States to repatriate migrants to some countries, leading Washington to look for third countries as a transit point.   

The Costa Rica flight received some attention in Uzbek media. 

Costa Rica’s human rights watchdog, La Defensoría de los Habitantes, said on Wednesday that it didn’t know details of the negotiation and agreement between the United States and the Costa Rican government for the repatriation of migrants, nor whether there are children, elderly people, disabled people or families in the group arriving in the Central American country. 

The Costan Rican government must guarantee their human rights, and provide medical checkups and adequate lodging space while they are in the country, according to the watchdog. It said Costa Rica, as a signatory to the U.N. convention against torture, must also confirm that none of the migrants will be subjected to “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment” once they return to their countries of origin.

The watchdog said it would remain vigilant, noting that it’s unclear whether the migrants will be safe from threats to their lives and freedom once forced to go back to their countries. 

Last month, as the Trump administration began to implement deportation plans, Kyrgyzstan warned its citizens in the United States to follow immigration law and always carry relevant documents with them. Chicago, a focus of some federal raids, has a growing Kyrgyz population.