Kazakhstan has launched a national energy project targeting the construction and modernisation of 7.8 gigawatts of power generation capacity by 2030, as the government moves to address a chronic shortage of baseload electricity infrastructure that has constrained economic growth.
The initiative, announced by the office of Prime Minister Olzhas Bektenov, will be financed entirely outside the state budget, requiring a minimum of 7.5 trillion tenge in private investment. It represents one of the most ambitious energy infrastructure programmes in the country’s post-independence history.
At the heart of the plan are several large-scale new power stations. A coal-fired plant with a capacity of 2,640 MW will be built in Ekibastuz — Kazakhstan’s established coal power hub — while facilities of 700 MW and 500 MW are planned for Kurchatov and Zhezkazgan respectively. Advanced coal-fired combined heat and power plants will also be constructed in Kokshetau, Semey and Ust-Kamenogorsk.
Alongside new builds, eleven existing power stations will be modernised during the same period, including the Aksu State Regional Power Plant, Ekibastuz GRES-2 and the Karaganda energy hub. The upgrades are expected to reduce the average wear rate of core power generation equipment across the sector by 12.6% within five years.
Environmental standards feature prominently in the design of the new coal capacity. All new facilities will be built exclusively using clean coal technologies, incorporating high-efficiency electrostatic precipitators, catalytic nitrogen oxide reduction systems and wet flue gas desulphurisation equipment — measures the government says will bring emissions in line with international standards.
The energy programme has been synchronised with upstream coal mining and rail logistics planning. Annual energy coal consumption in Kazakhstan is projected to grow by approximately 20 million tonnes by 2030 to fuel the expanded generation fleet. To meet that demand, the country’s fleet of gondola freight wagons will be expanded by 600 units per day, railway infrastructure will be modernised, and predictable tariff corridors for domestic coal supply will be introduced to provide pricing stability for power producers.
The government also expects the national project to generate significant knock-on demand across the domestic manufacturing sector, including for locally produced boiler units, power transformers and industrial automation systems — embedding the energy build-out within a broader industrial development strategy.