Despite being home to a wealth of natural resources including gas, the Central Asian country of Uzbekistan has faced energy shortages.
Moscow meanwhile relies heavily on energy revenues but has seen export plummet amid since the offensive. “This is the largest trilateral energy project” between the three ex-Soviet countries, Putin said, after formally launching the shipment. He was hosting a meeting in Moscow with his Uzbek and Kazakh counterparts, Shavkat Mirziyoyev and Kassym-Jomart Tokayev. “The timely implementation of such... project shows that Russia, Kazakhstan, and Uzbekistan are capable of tackling the most complex and ambitious tasks,” Putin said. “Kazakhstan will be able to solve the issue of gasification of its northern and eastern regions” while Uzbekistan will “gain another source of energy”. Putin added that the leaders would during the afternoon discuss further cooperation in the energy sector as a whole.
Russia’s offensive against Ukraine has rattled nerves in Central Asian nations, including Kazakhstan, which has sought to distance itself from Moscow.
But the former Soviet states retain close political and economic ties with Russia.