Lombardy-based textile and construction material manufacturers are significantly expanding their production operations in Uzbekistan, translating bilateral investment discussions into concrete industrial projects across multiple manufacturing sectors.
The expansion gained momentum following the Tashkent Investment Forum in June, where business representatives and regional officials from Lombardy engaged directly with Uzbekistan on strengthening trade, economic, and investment cooperation. These discussions moved beyond diplomatic protocol into substantive negotiations on expanding joint manufacturing ventures across the textile and construction industries.
Current joint operations between Lombardy companies and Uzbekistan now encompass production of non-woven materials, textiles, and knitwear. Projects targeting finished textile manufacturing and construction materials production are advancing through development phases and moving toward implementation, positioning both sectors as growth engines within the bilateral commercial framework.
Formalizing trade relationships
To institutionalize and scale bilateral business operations, both regions have formalized several strategic agreements. These include establishing a dedicated trade house in Milan to serve as the operational center for ongoing commercial coordination, organizing an industrial and export potential exhibition in the Italian city, and launching the “Uzbek Organic” branded export product line. These infrastructure commitments signal a deliberate shift from project-by-project negotiations toward sustained, systematic trade partnerships.
The bilateral framework reflects strategic complementarities. Lombardy, one of Europe’s most economically developed and industrialized regions, seeks to leverage Uzbekistan’s expanding production capacity and investment-friendly regulatory environment. Uzbekistan, positioned as Central Asia’s largest economy, aims to attract advanced manufacturing technologies and European capital while broadening export channels into European markets.
For international companies in textiles, construction materials, design, and industrial manufacturing, this development signals growing institutional maturity in Uzbekistan’s business environment. As European manufacturers establish operational footholds and scale production, ancillary services — specialized logistics, equipment suppliers, technical consulting, design support — are expanding proportionally. The emerging structured trade corridors, combined with government-backed business support mechanisms and industrial zones, create tangible opportunities for foreign stakeholders considering entry into or expansion within Uzbekistan’s rapidly evolving manufacturing landscape and Central Asian markets.



