- EBRD invests almost €2.26 billion in six regional economies
- Over 60 per cent of funds channelled to support sustainable infrastructure projects
- 58 per cent of investments promote green economy financing
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has set a new operational record in Central Asia by investing €2.26 billion through 121 projects in six regional economies last year – almost doubling its annual investment in Central Asia compared with 2023. It also mobilised €784 million from co-financiers, thus bringing more than €3 billion into the region’s real sector.
Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan were the leading recipients of the EBRD funding (€938 million and €913 million respectively). The countries also became the fifth and sixth largest investment destinations for the Bank globally. Elsewhere in Central Asia the EBRD provided €264 million for projects in Mongolia, €88 million in Tajikistan and €52 million in the Kyrgyz Republic.
- the construction of a new wastewater treatment plant and associated infrastructure in Kazakhstan’s city of Aktobe; the EBRD provided a sovereign loan of €96.4 million in what was the EBRD’s largest municipal project in Central Asia to date
- an investment of US$ 12.5 million (€ 11.3 million) in a green bond issuance by Khan Bank to support the first such bond of a local commercial bank listed on the Mongolian Stock Exchange
- the acquisition of a 17.36 per cent stake in Sarytogan Graphite Limited, an Australian Securities Exchange-listed company exploring the graphite deposit in the Karaganda region of Kazakhstan – it was the Bank’s first direct equity investment in the critical raw materials sector in Central Asia
- investing almost US$ 42 million (€ 38.1 million) in shares of Kazakhstan’s flagship carrier, Air Astana, through an initial public offering, in what was the country’s first partial privatisation.
Fresh EBRD funds were committed to support greater sustainability of the national grid operators in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan and facilitate the integration of renewables. The Bank provided a €252 million loan to the Kazakhstan Electricity Grid Operating Company (KEGOC) for the construction of around 600 km of 500kV transmission infrastructure and for the integration of the West Kazakhstan Power System into the country’s Unified Power System. Its sovereign loan of US$ 66.4 million (€ 60.3 million) to the National Electric Grid of Uzbekistan (NEGU) will support the construction of a 230 km 500 kV transmission line in the Navoi region. This project will help to eliminate bottlenecks in the grid and reduce electricity outages.
In Uzbekistan the EBRD organised an A/B loan of US$ 226 million (€ 205 million) for the development, design, construction and operation of a 200 MW solar photovoltaic power plant and a 501 MWh battery energy storage system (BESS) in the country’s Tashkent region. To date, this is one of the largest EBRD-supported BESS projects in the economies where the Bank operates.
In the Kyrgyz Republic the Bank’s funds were channelled to support sustainable operations of the national grid operator, the National Electric Grid of the Kyrgyz Republic. The EBRD organised a €14 million financial package for upgrades the existing or installation of new transformers and replacement of associated equipment in the Osh and Issyk-Kul regions.
In Tajikistan the Bank organised a financial facility of €31 million for the national transmission network operator Shabaqahoi Intiqoli Barq. The funds will help upgrade the existing transformer and construct a new one at the Sugd-500 substation in the north of the country.