Central Asia is experiencing a quiet but significant shift in European corporate strategy. On June 9, 2025, when Slovakia and Uzbekistan concluded their business forum at Tashkent’s IV International Investment Forum, it marked more than just another multilateral handshake — it represented European manufacturers making concrete bets on the region’s economic potential.
The numbers tell a compelling story. Trade between Slovakia and Uzbekistan had grown 50 percent year-over-year, yet remains surprisingly modest compared to the market’s size and capacity. That gap caught the attention of Slovakia’s business establishment: a delegation of 25 companies descended on Tashkent, joining approximately 19 Slovak enterprises already operating in-country. They weren’t exploring possibilities — they were finalizing commitments.
Concrete industrial cooperation framework
The forum delivered tangible results. Both nations inked agreements for 15 joint ventures spanning machine engineering, chemical production, transport infrastructure, construction materials, energy development, metallurgy, and IT solutions. It reads like a comprehensive blueprint for industrial collaboration: heavy industry, digital services, and physical infrastructure all within a single framework.
The Slovak firms involved aren’t household names in Western Europe, but they operate at scale. OFZ, for instance, has already relocated ferroalloys production to Uzbekistan — a decision that speaks volumes about manufacturing economics and supply chain strategy. Other participants brought expertise across automotive supply chains, chemical engineering, and construction technology. This wasn’t a chamber of commerce fishing expedition; it was industrial capacity seeking new operational bases.
What this signals for regional investment
Uzbekistan’s attraction as an investment destination reflects deliberate policy work. The broader TIIF initiative had processed 44 billion dollars in investment agreements over three years, with 57 projects live and 263 more in construction or development phases. The Slovak-Uzbek agreement feeds into this ecosystem but also signals a particular development: European manufacturing is genuinely decentralizing eastward, seeking cost efficiencies, regional market access, and supply chain resilience in Central Asia.
The forum was attended by senior officials from both nations, including representations at prime ministerial level, which underlined the governments’ commitment to institutional frameworks supporting such partnerships. However, the substance lies not in the ceremonial dimensions but in the bottom-line commitment of industrial companies to deploy capital and operations in a new market.
Implications for international market participants
For companies in manufacturing, construction, infrastructure, and design sectors evaluating Central Asian expansion, the Slovakia-Uzbekistan outcome provides instructive precedent. These are not speculative ventures or exploratory investments; they represent established firms moving from discussion phases into execution. The shift signals that Uzbekistan has achieved sufficient regulatory maturity and operational transparency for European industrial players to justify serious capital commitment. International firms seeking to penetrate Central Asian markets, optimize supply chains, or establish regional manufacturing hubs will recognize that Slovakia’s industrial sector has effectively validated Uzbekistan as a credible destination — one where business can move from negotiation to implementation without the delays and uncertainties that plague less mature markets.



