• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%

Traditional Kazakh Foods Find a Niche in Foreign Markets

Traditional Kazakh food products such as kazy (a sausage-like delicacy made of horse meat), kumys (a fermented beverage made from mare’s milk), and kurt (dry cheese made from fermented milk) are now expanding beyond Kazakhstan’s borders, becoming part of the country’s export potential.

According to QazTrade Trade Policy Development Center, with state support, the export of traditional Kazakh foods could reach $50-$80 million by 2028.

Russia and China remain the largest markets for traditional Kazakh foods, as these countries are home to more than 2 million ethnic Kazakhs, which creates a stable demand for traditional products. Kurt and kumys are particularly popular on the Russian market. In China, especially in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, home to more than 10 million Muslims, there is growing demand for meat delicacies and halal products.

The export of traditional Kazakh dairy products shows steady growth. The export of kumys, shubat (camel’s milk), and ayran (fermented cow’s milk) totaled $13.4 million in 2024 and $17.3 million in 2025 (a 29.4% increase).

The main difficulty in exporting kumys is its short shelf life. Chilled kumys can be stored for only 3-5 days, so delivering it to more distant markets is a challenge. Producers are currently seeking solutions to this problem, including pasteurising it so that it can be stored for up to 30 days, as well as lyophilised kumys powder. Such products are already being supplied to China, although volumes remain modest for now.

Kazakhstan’s traditional foods are gradually finding their niche in foreign markets under a nomadic gastronomy brand, the cuisine of steppe culture, based on natural meat and dairy products.

In October 2025, another Kazakh delicacy entered the U.S. market when Tary Coffee, a cafe aimed at introducing visitors to Kazakh cuisine and traditional products, began operating in Chicago. One of the products featured on the menu is talkan, which is made from roasted and ground grains. In addition to talkan, the cafe’s menu features traditional Kazakh foods such as millet, nawut (crystallised sugar), alongside various grain-based ingredients.

According to Aitmukhamed Aldazharov, General Director of QazTrade, traditional Kazakh foods meet the world’s growing demand for functional foods and superfoods. Kurt is a source of valuable microelements, while tary and talkan are becoming increasingly recognised by foreign buyers during trade missions and international exhibitions.

“Traditional steppe food sells well and is in demand through networks of Kazakh restaurants and cafes abroad. For example, the famous cappuccino with tary, a kind of ‘ground steppe coffee,’ has already entered the U.S. market,” he said.

Kazakhstan Proposes Creating a Digital Platform Within the EAEU to Coordinate Freight

Kazakhstan has proposed the creation of a unified digital platform for coordinating cargo flows within the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). Prime Minister Olzhas Bektenov presented the proposal at a meeting of the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council in Shymkent.

The proposal involves developing an integrated system based on AI that will improve the efficiency of logistics processes across the union.

Currently, the EAEU comprises five countries: Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia. Moldova, Uzbekistan, Cuba, and Iran hold observer status.

According to Bektenov, the creation of a unified AI-based platform will reduce cargo delivery times and lower business costs.

“In order to fully realize the transit and transport potential of the Union’s member states, it is proposed to create an integrated platform for coordinating cargo flows based on artificial intelligence,” he noted.

Kazakhstan is paying particular attention to the digitization of control procedures. In particular, it is proposed to fully transition veterinary and phytosanitary controls to an electronic format. This involves moving away from paper documents and implementing data exchange mechanisms both within the EAEU and with third countries.

Kazakhstan is a regional leader in terms of readiness for AI implementation.  Further initiatives include the creation of an artificial intelligence fund and an international computing hub.

Global Terrorism Index: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan Show Zero Risk of Terrorism

The countries of Central Asia are among those least affected by terrorism globally, according to the newly published Global Terrorism Index 2026 report. However, the report suggests that the region’s stability is increasingly influenced by external factors, particularly its proximity to Afghanistan.

Country scores are a composite measure made up of four indicators: incidents, fatalities, injuries and hostages. To measure the impact of terrorism, a five-year weighted average is applied. The main concentrations of terrorist activity remain in Africa and South Asia. The overall level of terrorism worldwide declined in 2025, although the nature of the threats became more complex and less predictable.

The report indicates that no terrorist incidents were recorded in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, or Turkmenistan, who all scored 0 for terrorism risk, placing them all joint 163rd out of the 163 nations researched. Uzbekistan (95th) remains in the minimal-risk category. Tajikistan is the only country in the region with a higher threat level, ranking 41st globally.

Central Asia’s relative stability is attributed to several factors, including robust security measures, the absence of active armed conflicts, and the limited presence of international terrorist organisations.

Despite relative internal stability, risks to Central Asia are increasingly emerging from outside the region. The report highlights growing activity by extremist groups in Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as worsening relations between the two countries, which could potentially escalate into open conflict by 2026. Particular concern is focused on the Tajik-Afghan border, where structural vulnerabilities persist.

In addition to external pressures, experts are drawing attention to internal dynamics. The report notes an acceleration of radicalisation, particularly among young people, with digital platforms and online content playing a significant role.

China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan Railway Enters Active Construction Phase

Construction of the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway has entered an active phase, following a meeting between the Kyrgyz government and representatives of the company implementing the project.

According to the project company, preparation of the main design materials has been completed, while refinement and approval of the technical documentation are ongoing. At the same time, large-scale work has begun at construction sites.

More than 5,000 people and approximately 5,600 units of specialized equipment are currently involved in the project. Tunnel excavation, earthworks, and bridge construction are underway, with total earthworks exceeding 3.5 million cubic meters.

Erlist Akunbekov, Deputy Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of Kyrgyzstan and the official overseeing the project, highlighted the importance of strict compliance with environmental standards and safety requirements. He added that the government would provide the necessary support and coordination to ensure timely completion.

Kyrgyz authorities view the railway as a strategic infrastructure project. The new transport corridor is expected to provide the country with direct access to international markets and strengthen its role in regional logistics.

One of the key challenges during the design phase was the difference in railway track gauge. China uses the 1,435 mm standard, while Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan use 1,520 mm. As a result, a compromise has been reached: part of the railway in Kyrgyzstan will be built to the Chinese standard, with a transshipment hub created to ensure connectivity.

Economically, the project is expected to boost exports, primarily agricultural products, to China, the Middle East, and Europe. At present, a significant portion of cargo is transported by road through Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, with onward routes to the Azov and Black Seas, as well as via China to Pakistan and India.

The launch of rail services is expected to reduce logistics costs and improve the competitiveness of Kyrgyz products in foreign markets.

Berdimuhamedov’s Beijing Visit and the Reshaping of Central Asia’s Gas System

The visit by Turkmenistan’s Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov, Chairman of the Halk Maslahaty, to Beijing on March 17–19 did more than routinely reaffirm Turkmenistan’s ties with China. It opened onto a wider issue in Central Asian energy, not simply about continuing the cooperation between Ashgabat and Beijing, but about how the renewal of that cooperation would affect the Central Asia–wide gas production and transmission system that increasingly intersects with China’s wider infrastructural and industrial presence in the region.

No dramatic announcement of any new export route highlighted that wider significance, which emerged from a narrower sequence of policy initiatives that carried broader implications. Xi Jinping used the visit to restate the importance of cooperation in natural gas while widening the agenda to include connectivity, clean energy, artificial intelligence, and the digital economy. Within days of the meeting, Turkmenistan moved ahead on a new phase of development at Galkynysh with CNPC. These events signal a further deepening Chinese role in the upstream and systemic organization of Central Asian energy.

What Beijing Actually Signaled

Beijing’s own language about the matter was direct. In the official Xinhua account of Xi’s March 18 meeting with Berdimuhamedov, China called for the two sides to “expand the scale of cooperation in the natural gas sector” and to raise trade and investment levels. Such language confirms that gas remains at the center of the relationship even as the bilateral agenda widens. For all the parallel discussions of digitalization, transport links, and non-resource cooperation, the political weight of Sino-Turkmen ties still rests primarily on energy.

The Chinese side, however, did not treat gas as a self-contained file. Gas remains the primary, but it is increasingly embedded within a wider pattern of regional engagement comprising energy, transport, and adjacent economic sectors. The same Beijing readout on the meeting with Berdimuhamedov placed connectivity, artificial intelligence, the digital economy, and clean energy alongside natural gas under a broader heading of expanded cooperation. This framing removes gas from its status as a stand-alone commodity and places it within a larger operational perspective.

Neither the main Chinese readout nor the public official Turkmen framing of the visit highlighted Line D of the Central Asia–China gas pipeline system. Line D has long stood as the clearest indicator of a future expansion of Turkmen gas exports through Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan into China. Had the visit produced a concrete breakthrough on that front, the official language would have been the obvious place to signal it. The practical movement after the trip lay elsewhere.

Why It Matters Beyond Turkmenistan

The focus lay at Galkynysh. In the immediate wake of the visit, President Serdar Berdimuhamedov authorized Turkmengaz to conclude a turnkey contract with CNPC Amudarya Petroleum Company Ltd. for Phase 4 of the Galkynysh gas field. The official Turkmen account linked the decision to meetings held during Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov’s visit to China and specified facilities capable of processing 10 billion cubic meters of marketable gas per year. TCA reported the same move as a new phase of CNPC-backed field development. So far as energy is concerned, the operative result of the visit was not a new pipeline announcement but new upstream capacity.

Yet the move has a wider Central Asian significance, because Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan are part of the existing China-bound gas architecture. CNPC’s own description of Line C identifies supply not only from Turkmenistan, but also from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. Any serious increase in Turkmen upstream capacity is therefore more than a bilateral supply matter between Ashgabat and Beijing. It bears on a system in which other Central Asian states are also contracted participants.

The significance of Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan becomes sharper when recent supply realities are taken into account. TCA reported in December that both countries have struggled to meet their own export commitments to China, while Russian gas has been used domestically to ease the resulting pressure on internal balances. Kazakhstan’s gas exports to China were estimated at about 5 bcm in 2025, still only half of its nominal 10 bcm annual commitment. In this context, additional Turkmen upstream capacity holds the potential to rearrange the pipeline system where Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan are already under strain, and thus the regional gas order.

What It Reveals About China’s Regional Role

The broader setting reinforces that reading. Around the time of Berdimuhamedov’s visit, Chinese firms were also advancing logistics projects in Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, including a major multimodal hub near Tashkent and an agro-logistics center in Kazakhstan. These initiatives did not follow from the visit itself, but they show China expanding its regional role at the same time in gas, transport, and industrial logistics. That wider activity gives the bilateral energy relationship with Turkmenistan a broader regional meaning.

Kazakhstan’s search for outside capital in critical minerals and clean energy belongs to the same pattern. Together, these developments show that Turkmen gas ties with China no longer stand apart from other regional dynamics. They are becoming part of a wider structure in which energy links, transport corridors, and industrial investment increasingly develop alongside one another.

Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan occupy a different place in this picture from Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. Their importance lies less in the present than in a possible future tied to Line D. Caution remains necessary here. Construction on Line D has been suspended for years, and Tajikistan’s energy minister said in February 2024 that pricing disagreements among the participating states were still blocking progress. As of Berdimuhamedov’s March 2026 visit to Beijing, there was still no official Chinese or Turkmen indication that this had changed. Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, therefore, remain relevant to the future shape of the system, but not to any immediate operational consequence of the visit.

From Bilateral Gas Ties to a Regional System

The takeaway from this constellation of events is that the visit signaled a renewed Chinese commitment to gas-sector cooperation with Turkmenistan, with knock-on effects for the rest of Central Asia, even if it did not signify a restart of Line D. The almost immediate move to advance Galkynysh further, likely for reinforcement of China’s access to Turkmen supply, by itself makes the visit regionally significant, given how the China-bound gas system links Turkmenistan to other Central Asian producers and participants through the existing regional gas system.

The implications differ for each country in the region. Turkmenistan remains the anchor supplier to China. Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan are already embedded in the functioning export architecture and have struggled to meet their own commitments within it. Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan come into play only if the suspended Line D construction is revived. The larger point is that China’s role in Central Asia is becoming more tightly connected across several domains.

Gas remains the base layer for inter-industrial cooperation, but logistics, infrastructure, clean energy, and digital-economic cooperation increasingly accompany it. Berdimuhamedov’s Beijing visit has brought this pattern more clearly into view. It is not merely a bilateral diplomatic episode, but a marker of how Central Asian energy is being organized within a broader regional framework shaped in growing measure by China.

World’s Top Fencers Compete in Astana and Tashkent 

Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan are hosting World Cup fencing competitions this week, reflecting the growth of the sport in Central Asia.

Top fencers from around the world have gathered in the Kazakhstani capital of Astana for the men’s and women’s epee competition, which started on Thursday and runs until Sunday. The two-day women’s saber contest in Tashkent, Uzbekistan began on Friday. A third World Cup, in men’s saber, is currently underway in Budapest, Hungary.

In total, more than 800 elite fencers are participating in the three events, according to the International Fencing Federation.

The federation says second-ranked Giulia Rizzi of Italy and sixth-ranked Hungarian Eszter Muhari are the fencers “to watch” on the women’s side in Astana, while on the men’s side, tenth-ranked Tristen Tulen of the Netherlands has had a breakout year. In Tashkent, two-time world champion Misaki Emura of Japan is a favorite.

Still, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan are establishing their presence in international fencing, winning medals in high-level competitions.

Last year, the men’s epee team of Kazakhstan won bronze at the World Fencing Championships in Tbilisi, Georgia, beating France for the medal.

The Uzbek competition will be hosted in the state-of-the-art Olympic City, the largest sports complex in Central Asia, and the designated hub for the 4th Asian Youth Games in 2029.

One of Uzbekistan’s top women is Zaynab Dayibekova, who competed in the Olympic Games in Tokyo and Paris and is currently ranked 29th in the world. She was part of the women’s saber team from Uzbekistan that won gold at the 2023 Asian Games, defeating host China in the semifinal and then Japan in the final.

Speaking at the opening ceremony in Tashkent, Otabek Umarov, First Deputy Chairman of the National Olympic Committee of Uzbekistan and Vice-President of the Olympic Council of Asia, said: “We are delighted to welcome the world’s best senior female fencers to Tashkent to experience Uzbekistan’s renowned hospitality, rich cultural heritage, and world-class sports facilities. We are grateful to our friends at the International Fencing Federation for their trust in our ability to host a spectacular event.”