Uzbekistan's Energy Transition Depends on Systematic Reforms
Louis Skyner
Rihla Initiative Implementation Council Member for Central Asia and the Caucasus
February 1, 2025
In the realm of global and energy security, 2024 was a year of unprecedented uncertainty. With issues ranging from ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza, tensions around Taiwan, and escalating populism and nationalism in the US and Europe, there were heightened concerns over energy security and the control of supply chains. US President Donald Trump’s first month in office has further fuelled the sense of an impending crisis, particularly with regards to his rhetoric around the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza, the adoption of tariffs, and the abandonment of green policy.
Any discussion of energy transition trends must therefore be visualised in the form of a triangle, ensuring that the competing and often contradictory goals of energy security, minimising climate impact, and ensuring energy affordability are in tension. Each country, sector, and policy crystallise a set of trade-offs between different points on this triangle.
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Photo: ACWA Power