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China and Uzbekistan establish furniture sector cooperation through technology transfer and joint ventures

Uzbek furniture makers are taking their biggest modernization leap yet, partnering directly with Chinese manufacturers to absorb advanced production technologies and establish joint ventures. The Association of Uzbekistan’s Furniture and Woodworking Industry, representing more than ten domestic companies, traveled to Foshan — Asia’s epicenter of furniture manufacturing — to negotiate concrete industry partnerships with their Chinese counterparts.

The program brought structured B2B negotiations and roundtable discussions with the Foshan Home Building Materials Industry association. The Uzbek delegation toured manufacturing floors at ZCY Group and Guangdong Sanci Smart Home Technology, diving into production methods and product ranges to map out collaboration opportunities and identify technology transfer pathways.

What emerged from these discussions: formal agreements between both sides to intensify business communications, implement systematic technology transfer mechanisms, and structure joint investment projects in Uzbekistan. These commitments translate into a clear pathway for Chinese manufacturers to share production expertise while enabling Uzbek enterprises to dramatically upgrade their output quality and manufacturing capacity.

New competitive advantage in Central Asia’s supply ecosystem

For international companies operating in furniture, construction, interior design, or manufacturing sectors, this cooperation signals meaningful expansion of production capabilities in Central Asia. The technology transfer agreements between Chinese leaders and Uzbek manufacturers represent a concrete pathway toward international-standard supply bases. Companies seeking sourcing partners, distribution networks, or market access across the region will find increasingly competitive Uzbek producers emerging from these modernization initiatives. The collaboration underscores Uzbekistan’s commitment to business-friendly policies and its growing role as a manufacturing hub within the broader Central Asian economy — a development that reshapes procurement strategies and partnership opportunities for global industry players.

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