News Kazakhstan27.04.2026
Water-energy balance of the region discussed by ministers of four Central Asian countries

QAZAQ GREEN. The heads of energy ministries of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan held a working meeting to discuss ensuring the stable operation of Central Asia's water and energy systems ahead of the irrigation season.
The talks were attended by Ministers of Energy of Kyrgyzstan Taalaibek Ibraev, Uzbekistan Jurabek Mirzamakhmudov and Tajikistan Daler Juma, as well as Uzbekistan's Minister of Water Management Shavkat Khamraev. Kazakhstan was represented by Minister of Energy Yerlan Akkenzhenov, Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation Nurzhan Nurzhigitov, the management of system operator KEGOC JSC and RFC for RES LLP, as well as representatives of the water authorities of partner countries.
The participants noted the historical interconnectedness of the region's energy systems, stressing that instability in one country inevitably affects the entire macro-region.
The Kazakhstani side confirmed its readiness to continue supporting the power system of Kyrgyzstan, which is experiencing an electricity deficit. According to Yerlan Akkenzhenov, actual electricity supplies from Kazakhstan to Kyrgyzstan from September 2025 to April 2026 amounted to more than 1,560 million kWh. These power flows directly contributed to maintaining the necessary water level in the Toktogul reservoir to meet the needs of the upcoming summer season. The Minister emphasised the need for all parties to strictly observe previously reached water and energy agreements.
During the meeting, expert groups held consultations and exchanged data. The parties agreed to continue technical work on coordinating parameters and digital indicators for the operation of energy systems.
Further coordination will continue at ministerial meetings scheduled for May in Tashkent and June in Bishkek.
Ember: Renewables overtake coal in global power generation for the first time
Kazakhstan continues accepting applications for May RES auctions
Water-energy balance of the region discussed by ministers of four Central Asian countries
Just transition: leaving no one behind in the energy transformation
CAREC and Central Asian universities sign new memoranda on green skills development
Kazakhstan and UNECE discuss energy resilience and low-carbon technologies
100,000 jobs and a skills gap: how Central Asia is preparing for the renewables boom
No transition without transmission: How Central Asia is building its energy future
ADB to invest $5.5bn across 15 projects in Kazakhstan
17 agreements worth over $2.3 billion signed at the opening of RES 2026 EXPO in Astana
World Bank to invest $1bn in Central Asia's energy integration
Kazakhstan and China to launch a 500 MW wind farm in Karaganda region
Kazakhstan and Tajikistan move toward clean power deal over Rogun HPP
Regional Ecological Summit 2026 opens in Astana
Solar pumps and drip irrigation help Kyrgyz farmers cut costs amid rising energy prices
Hormuz closure failed to trigger coal comeback as solar and wind filled the gap
Astana set to launch RES 2026 EXPO and ink key international deals
Central Asian countries to discuss energy transition at RES 2026 in Astana
Moldova surpassed 1 GW of installed renewable energy capacity
China begins building US$1 billion hydropower station in Cambodia