Ministry of Energy announces $380 million project to support 1,500 MW of new renewable energy, more private investment into renewables and wider decarbonisation in Uzbekistan. This project will enable reliable energy supplies to millions of households and businesses across Uzbekistan.
Tashkent, Uzbekistan, June 30 2021 – The Ministry of Energy has announced that a new $380 million project to enhance the performance of the National Electric Grids of Uzbekistan (NEGU) has been approved by the World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors.
The Electricity Sector Transformation And Resilient Transmission Project will ensure reliable energy supplies to millions of households and businesses across Uzbekistan. It is supported by $380 million in credit from the International Development Association (part of the World Bank Group), and a $43 million loan from the Green Climate Fund (GCF) under the Sustainable Renewables Risk Mitigation Initiative Facility.
The government of Uzbekistan will receive this financing at very low interest rates and a long repayment period, of up to 40 years. The GCF will also provide a $4 million grant to cover selected project activities.
The project aims to support Uzbekistan in its clean energy transition by improving the transmission network’s capacity to integrate renewable energy produced by the private sector. The project will:
- Contribute to Uzbekistan’s plans to decarbonise its electricity sector;
- Directly support the integration of 1,500 MW of renewable energy into the power grid – leading to further CO2 emissions reduction; and
- Mobilise private investment into Uzbekistan’s renewable energy sector
Mr. Alisher Sultanov, Minister of Energy of Uzbekistan, said:
“Uzbekistan has been working closely with the World Bank and other international institutions to open up the country’s power sector to private investment. This project, and the confidence of its backers in Uzbekistan, is testament to the reforms our country has implemented to date. This latest financing will help us reach our goal of 25% of energy consumption deriving from renewable sources by 2030. It will also be a key component of Uzbekistan’s ambitious, wider strategy to develop environmentally friendly renewable sources of energy to meet our growing electricity demand.”
In line with the Nationally Determined Contribution under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Uzbekistan is committed to policy goals to improve energy efficiency and increase renewable energy’s share of the country’s energy mix. Uzbekistan is proud to be playing a leading role in developing green energy in the region.
This project with the World Bank is one of several major projects being undertaken in Uzbekistan, following reforms that have been, and will continue to be implemented. The Government is also working closely with international institutions including the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Asian Development Bank and the International Finance Corporation.
The project will:
- Help modernise outdated energy infrastructure by financing part of NEGU’s investment program through the rehabilitation, upgrade, and expansion of 22 existing obsolete high-voltage substations and construction of a new 500 kV transmission substation and associated transmission lines in 11 regions of Uzbekistan
- Introduce modern digital and telecoms technologies and solutions to improve monitoring, control, and operation of the power transmission system through a new Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) and Energy Management System for NEGU’s central and regional dispatch centres – to replace outdated systems
- Support NEGU’s transformation – new business processes, financial, operational, and commercial performance, digitization, and institutional capacity
- Introduce new foundations for the transition to a competitive electricity market in Uzbekistan via market reforms
- Develop the regional electricity trade in Central Asia by rehabilitating and expanding transmission infrastructure connecting Uzbekistan with Afghanistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan’s electricity systems
The project was prepared with a $350,000 grant from the Europe and Central Asia Regional Capacity Development Trust Fund and a $500,000 grant from the Program for Asia Connectivity and Trade. It was informed by the Support for Preparation of Energy Sector Strategy programmatic technical assistance co-funded by the World Bank-led Energy Sector Management Assistance Program.