#ResearchArticle
π¨π³ As Uzbekistan pursues its climate goals, including achieving carbon neutrality by 2050, China emerges as a primary supplier of crucial technologies such as solar panels, wind turbines, and electric vehicles. This dependence raises concerns about economic sovereignty, energy security, and the risks associated with Chinaβs dominant market position.
The piece presents two strategic options for Uzbekistan: continuing to import affordable Chinese technology, which ensures rapid green energy adoption but deepens dependency, or adopting policies to reduce foreign technology imports to support the development of domestic industries. The latter approach aims at fostering technological self-reliance, potentially increasing energy security but may lead to higher costs and slower progress in meeting climate objectives.π±
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π¨π³ As Uzbekistan pursues its climate goals, including achieving carbon neutrality by 2050, China emerges as a primary supplier of crucial technologies such as solar panels, wind turbines, and electric vehicles. This dependence raises concerns about economic sovereignty, energy security, and the risks associated with Chinaβs dominant market position.
The piece presents two strategic options for Uzbekistan: continuing to import affordable Chinese technology, which ensures rapid green energy adoption but deepens dependency, or adopting policies to reduce foreign technology imports to support the development of domestic industries. The latter approach aims at fostering technological self-reliance, potentially increasing energy security but may lead to higher costs and slower progress in meeting climate objectives.π±
π Read the article
πiais.uz | π΅Facebook | πTelegram | π¬YouTube | π·Instagram | π°Linkedin