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Can Kazakhstan Green Its Economy?

Altay Abibullayev, Official Spokesperson, Central Communications Service of Kazakhstan
January 11, 2013  |  6 Comments

Kazakhstan is a major oil producer with abundant reserves of hydrocarbons in an energy-hungry region. So some people may be surprised to know that we are committed to building a green economy as part of the process to equip Kazakhstan to be a competitive industrial player.

Why have we chosen the path of a “green” economy?  The answer is simple.  The earth’s resources are finite and future growth to sustain a growing global population has to be achieved on a different basis.  No country whether it is a developing state or an advanced industrial economy can close its eyes to this reality.

Kazakhstan has already initiated a “Green Bridge Partnership” to bring together governments, international organizations and private business to find transnational solutions to sustainable growth.  We see the partnership as a platform to transfer best available green technologies and best green practices to Central Asia. 

Our “Green Bridge” proposal received the support of the international community at the UN’s Rio+20 Summit in June. Since Rio, major foreign investors including the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the International Financial Corporation, the World Bank and partner governments have expressed interest in taking part.  We are now starting on the practical implementation of this project. 

Kazakhstan has enormous potential in renewable energy, particularly in wind and solar.  Wind power can potentially produce 25 times more energy in a year than we currently produce from our hydrocarbons.  We also see vast opportunities to conserve energy, including at the consumer end by 50-60%.  In addition, we are taking urgent steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and will be the first CIS country to launch a cap and trade system starting in January 2013.

Reducing our dependence on energy from hydrocarbons and their impact on the environment is at the center of our transition to a “green” economy. 

We are encouraged by the fact that several major companies are interested in the potential of Kazakhstan and Central Asia for developing “green” energy projects.  Located in a strategically vital area between Europe and Asia, our region has the opportunity to play a major role in developing sustainable energy solutions. 

We can do so by absorbing European experience, and by adapting and applying it to address the urgent challenges we face.  In the process, we will be able to demonstrate results to other countries in Asia.

A catalyst in this process is the fact that we will be hosting Expo 2017 on the theme of “Future Energy.”  This is the first time that a major international exhibition of this kind is coming to a country from the former Soviet Union. We are expecting 5 million visitors from 100 countries.

We see Expo 2017 in Astana as a major event not just timely in terms of the needs of our region and the broader international community.  We see it as a platform for speeding up the sharing of innovative technologies and creating new impulses for regional co-operation.

In terms of practical results, we believe that Expo 2017 can contribute to addressing many issues in Central Asia and the CIS that are related to energy and environmental security, including water.

An exhibition on this scale will build international awareness of the energy and environmental challenges that we need to face in the region.  It will also attract some of the best expertise available in the world on subjects such as energy saving technologies and alternative energy solutions, including solar, wind and wave power.

We intend Astana to be a showcase for demonstrating the latest global developments in these areas and help establish Kazakhstan as a hub for developing alternative energy solutions across Central Asia.

Our commitment to achieving this goal matches the ambition of our vision.

Lead image: Kazakhstan flag hands via Shutterstock

6 Comments

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terry hallinan
terry hallinan
January 22, 2013
andrew-middleton,

"Kazakhstan does have a complicating factor- Soviet planning ensured large investments in district water heating in many urban areas that still need huge amounts of fossil energy."

I took a very brief look for Kazakhstan's "district water heating" and found only gas-fired heating.

That is not remotely the geothermal district heating in Boise or the "geothermal cities" in England or China. I have forgotten other places but somewhere there was talk of adding air conditioning, a natural for geothermal. Iceland is the premiere example of geothermal district heating and it is reported in the coldest weather [it gets real, real cold in Iceland] you can see many houses with their windows open since heating is so cheap. Even bananas are grown in a geothermal greenhouse and commercial production was once considered. Idaho does have commercial alligator farms with the same source.

The remote hamlet of Husavik in Iceland has even generated 3MW of power from very tepid geothermal waters by adding heat from a trash burner and utilizing the advanced 2-liquid Kalina cycle.

I know little about it but Sweden, which generates no power from geothermal, is said nevertheless to be at the cutting edge in heating with geothermal.

The New Mexico Lightning Dock geothermal complex that has long harbored a large rose growing greenhouse and tilapia hatchery is now planning to generate power for the facility with modern technology.

If we could somehow get off the EGS deep geothermal fixation, there is enormous energy available in shallow low temperature geothermal.

Best, Terry
Andrew Middleton
Andrew Middleton
January 22, 2013
Kazakhstan does have a complicating factor- Soviet planning ensured large investments in district water heating in many urban areas that still need huge amounts of fossil energy. Ideally I would love to see some sort of thermal cogeneration to utilize existing infrastructure.

Because the government opted to lease the Caspian oil and gas reservoirs instead of developing them domestically, resource revenue goes to the government and citizens do not enjoy many benefits themselves. I would love to see a domestic wind industry take a different approach by involving citizens with co-op style stock holding in community supported electricity that would be able to deliver a degree of independence to small, isolated communities in this vast region with such a low population density.
terry hallinan
terry hallinan
January 22, 2013
Kazakhs were reputedly first to tame horses - for food and dairy.

Any people that can milk a mare deserve some credit but they can do far better with baseload renewable power rather than the high-priced weak sisters of sun and wind that faint a lot.

Lots of news from Kazakhstan on the most muscular and cheapest of all renewables, geothermal.

http://geothermalpower.einnews.com/country/kazakhstan

Google naturally went to Chevron first with their huge PR machine but Chevron is not exactly the only company doing geothermal in Kazakhstan and elsewhere.

Best, Terry
Victor Afyan
Victor Afyan
January 16, 2013
Valuable initiative!
In solar PV implementation CIS countries (except for Ukraine probably)are almost at zero level although in soviet times extensive research and practical projects were conducted. In 2005 Armenia adopted net metering mechanism for grid connection of all kinds of renewable energy plants with capacities up to 150kW. But net metering created problems with national grid operator contrary to more comprehensible tariff mechanism.Net metering could work for demo projects not for commercial ones. We still have in Armenia only 2 grid connected PV plants (building integrated) with modest10kW each. Special feed-in-tariff along with a cap for yearly installed megawatts is needed. CIS countries have specific problems and their cooperation could be fruitful in addition to the advanced renewable energy counties' experience in legal and technical issues.
Michael Launer
Michael Launer
January 12, 2013
Tem ne menee, delo poshlo. Udachi vam vsem!
Syrymbet Idrissov
Syrymbet Idrissov
January 12, 2013
As far as I know, the laws regarding tariffs and renewable energy integration are not passed yet. In my opinion its a major obstacle for international wind power companies to do their projects in a reach wind energy resource country. Moreover the development of small wind and residential solar energy sources will be slow, without financial incentives and tariffs to sell the electricity back to grid.

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Altay Abibullayev

Altay Abibullayev

Altay Abibullayev is the official spokesperson of the Central Communications Service for the President of Kazakhstan.
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