Generic Hero BannerGeneric Hero Banner
Latest market news

Uzbekistan to hit 25pc renewable power target by 2026

  • : Electricity
  • 23/05/08

Uzbekistan is on course to achieve its goal of delivering 25pc of its energy needs from renewables by 2026, well ahead of its original 2030 target, according to energy minister Jurabek Mirzamahmudov on 8 May.

"We have to act fast," Mirzamahmudov told the World Utilities Congress in Abu Dhabi. "If our plan during the Cop 27 [UN climate conference in November 2022] was to achieve 25pc renewables by 2030, after this winter, in which we suffered a lot… we are now planning to have this 25pc by 2026."

Uzbekistan generated around 10pc of its power from renewables in 2020. The country is planning to introduce a total of 15GW of new solar and wind generation capacity by 2026, of which around 2GW is scheduled to come on line this year, Mirzamahmudov said.

He added that the UAE "is becoming one of Uzbekistan's key partners" to deliver on these targets. The UAE's state-owned clean energy company Masdar built Uzbekistan's first utility-scale project ꟷ a 100MW photovoltaic plant that was inaugurated in 2021.

Uzbekistan is also due to inaugurate the construction of three more solar plants within a month, also in partnership with Masdar, Mirzamahmudov said.

A consortium of Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth fund Mubadala and energy investment firm Taqa in September 2022 signed agreements to invest in the privatisation of two gas-fired power generation plants with a combined capacity of 1.6GW in the Talimarjan power complex in Uzbekistan, with each company taking a 40pc stake.

With the help of such partnerships, Mirzamahmudov said the country "will replace all gas-fired power stations with new modern power stations" running primarily on wind and solar energy and also hydropower.

The central Asian nation is also looking at nuclear energy, beyond solar, wind and hydropower, he said. "We are seventh in the world for uranium production. We have already started a program – we are now developing the human capital, studying all the technologies."

Uzbekistan signed a preliminary agreement with Russian state-owned nuclear energy firm Rosatom in 2022 for the development of Uzbekistan's national nuclear infrastructure. But that "does not limit us" from working with others as well, Mirzamahmudov said.

Looking ahead, Mirzamahmudov said Uzbekistan is due to unveil a "very big renewables program" at Cop 28 — this year's UN climate conference being held in Dubai — which will be worth upwards of $10bn.

The investment will be "in the double digits," he said. "We are really trying to boost our renewables."


Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more