— The region has large mineral reserves, especially oil and gas.
According to conservative estimates in the mid-2010s, the total volume of oil reserves in Central Asian countries reached 15-31 billion barrels (about 7% of total world resources), the total volume of natural gas reserves — 230-360 trillion cubic meters (7% of total world reserves*). The region can be included in the top 10 largest world gold producers (if we consider it as an integral entity with common trade rules).
The states of the Central Asian region have developed mining, metallurgical and chemical industries, fuel and energy complexes, which are concentrated mainly in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan.
The approach to mineral extraction is different in these countries. Turkmenistan’s economy is almost entirely dependent on gas sales, Uzbekistan covers its fuel needs through domestic production, but is not a typical victim of the «Dutch disease», i.e. does not base its economy solely on the sale of minerals, Kazakhstan seems to have formed a hybrid model of economy, free from full statehood, but, due to internal specifics, is still extremely dependent on oil and gas sales.
The importance of the region in terms of resource supply is disproportionately greater than the modest role it plays in the global economy.
*It is worth noting that the estimate of the world’s mineral reserves is not a fixed value either.
— The Central Asian region has already established routes for safe transportation of minerals (some of them as far back as the Soviet era). The region’s potential as a transit zone for any goods is unique and comparable only to the potential of developed regions such as, for example, the European Union.
— When the borders were opened for free export of minerals (mid-1990s), the post-Soviet countries of the region still had a strong enough base of specialists for the extraction and transportation of minerals. Any foreign company could start developing local deposits with the support of a pool of low-paid but qualified local performers.
— To a certain point, the most mineral-rich countries in the region were extremely stable politically and represented predictable and reliable partners.
Factors complicating the initially favorable picture include the fact that:
— Central Asia is surrounded on three sides by three large states (China, Russia and Iran), positioning themselves as peculiar competitors of the developed countries of the European Union and the United States.
— Russia and China themselves are (for various reasons) major buyers of minerals and seek to establish their own playing conditions in the region’s markets.
On the other hand, the weakness of the newborn political systems, the absence (at the time of independence) of its own developed financial elite, the strong influence of authoritarian neighbors, and corrupt governments that were not interested in upholding the interests of their own citizens, created conditions for numerous acts of corruption and violations of the law.
On this day — March 19, 2020 — a noticeably aged Mukhtar Jakishev, the former head of the Kazatomprom national company, who spent more than 10 years in prison, was released on parole.
He is greeted with writings on the placards and T-shirts, «Freedom to Jakishev». When the gates finally open, two black jeeps drive out. People run when they see Mukhtar Jakishev in one of them.
Then — postgraduate studies
In general, everything was going to Mukhtar Jakishev to take some high post in the government: experience and connections with people who were in very good standing at that time contributed to this.
But he went to the Kazatomprom nuclear company — not the most bread-and-butter place at that time, with a huge potential for development.
No one in the public eye was following Jakishev: he wasn’t involved in politics, he wasn’t epathetic — he was, you might say, just doing business. And it did not work out in the government — he held the post of deputy energy minister for only three months, and then, as he says, «everyone was fed up with me, because I was breaking the rules of the game».
«Fed up with» – let’s say. But you can’t put him in prison for that, can you?
In 2009, when the Kazakhstani government wanted the Russian entities, whose representative was a relative of Vladimir Shkolnik [Kazakhstani statesman — NB], to buy a stake in Uranium One, Jakishev proposed a contract with the Japanese company Toshiba. But the Kazakhstani government did not approve the deal with Japan. On May 21, 2009, Mukhtar Jakishev was arrested, and on May 22, 2009, Vladimir Shkolnik was recommended by the Prime Minister of Kazakhstan for the vacated position of the head of NAC Kazatomprom JSC.
Already in June 2009 (immediately after Jakishev’s arrest), Atomredmetzoloto (ARMZ), a subsidiary of Rosatom, acquired a 16.6% stake in Uranium One in exchange for a 50% stake in the Karatau uranium mining project jointly with Kazatomprom. In 2010, Uranium One received a 50% and 49% stake in Kazakhstan’s Akbastau and Zarechnoye uranium mining projects. In exchange, Russia’s ARMZ increased its stake in Uranium One to 51%.