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Pakistan and Uzbekistan deepen regional trade cooperation on transport and investment

Uzbekistan and Pakistan are charting a strategic expansion of cross-border trade and investment ties, with particular emphasis on transport infrastructure, energy cooperation, and regional logistics. The growing coordination reflects recognition in both nations that geographical proximity and complementary economic structures create significant untapped potential for bilateral commerce and joint ventures.

These developments became concrete when Ambassador Alisher Tukhtayev of Uzbekistan met on June 2 with Governor Faisal Karim Kundi of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The discussion moved beyond diplomatic pleasantries to operationalize commitments made at previous levels and identify concrete commercial pathways forward.

Trans-Afghan Railway as the strategic linchpin

The Trans-Afghan Railway Project emerged as the centerpiece of the bilateral agenda. The planned route’s passage through Khyber Pakhtunkhwa — specifically via Harlachi — positions the province as a critical transit junction for goods moving between Central Asia and South Asian markets. For Uzbekistan, the railway offers gateway access to Pakistani and Indian demand centers. The governor emphasized that the route carries strategic significance not merely as passive infrastructure, but as an active platform for integrated regional commerce. Both sides recognized the project’s transformative potential for reshaping cost structures and activation of trade corridors long characterized by underutilization.

Broadening the investment framework across sectors

The bilateral agenda extended well beyond rail transport. Discussions explicitly covered geology, oil and gas development, digital technologies, agriculture, livestock production, tourism, and logistics services. This breadth signals intent to construct comprehensive partnerships rather than transactional single-sector engagements. The governor voiced explicit backing for Uzbekistan’s regional connectivity initiative — a policy framework emphasizing cross-border infrastructure and integrated trade flows. This endorsement carries practical significance: it provides government-level validation that can accelerate regulatory processes and reduce bureaucratic friction to private investment flows.

Converting framework into action

Operationalizing these ambitions requires sustained momentum. The delegations agreed to activate initiatives under the 2022 Memorandum of Understanding between Surkhandarya Region and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province — a document that had remained largely symbolic until now. Concrete mechanisms for implementation include a business delegation visit from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to Uzbekistan scheduled for August 2025, and formal sister-city arrangements linking Termez and Peshawar. These institutional channels will enable sustained business networking and repeated contact cycles. Cultural and educational partnerships — encompassing student exchanges and academic cooperation — will provide supplementary networks for long-term commercial relationships.

Implications for international business participation

For international companies operating in manufacturing, construction, interior design, and logistics sectors, this bilateral momentum creates tangible market opportunities. The Trans-Afghan Railway — if completed — would fundamentally restructure freight economics and delivery timeframes for goods transiting between Central Asia and South Asia, potentially favoring companies positioned as regional consolidators or logistics platform operators. Joint initiatives in tourism development signal emerging demand for hospitality infrastructure, interior furnishings, and design services across both markets. More broadly, as trade barriers diminish through coordinated regional initiatives, the investment climate in both countries becomes proportionally more attractive to foreign operators seeking to establish regional bases or expand existing operations. The explicit focus on joint ventures across energy, logistics, and digital sectors indicates that both nations are actively signaling openness to foreign capital participation in these strategically important domains.

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