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Trade, Energy, AI Dominate Kazakhstan–China Business Council

ASTANA — President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev described China as Kazakhstan’s destined neighbor, close friend, and long-term strategic partner during the Sept. 2 Eighth Meeting of the Kazakhstan–China Business Council in Beijing, Akorda press service reported.
Photo credit: Akorda
He noted that bilateral trade reached a record $44 billion last year, and emphasized the two countries’ intention to push this figure even higher over the next five years, backed by strong political will at the highest level. China has already invested $27 billion in Kazakhstan, with more than 6,000 Chinese-backed enterprises operating in the country, ranging from giants such as CNPC, Sinopec, CITIC, and Huawei to mid-sized businesses. Tokayev described his talks with President Xi Jinping as productive, voicing confidence in the partnership’s future.
He underlined Kazakhstan’s steady economic growth, with GDP expected to surpass $300 billion by year’s end. Reforms such as the National Digital Investment Platform, a new Investment Headquarters, and the recent bilateral investment protection agreement, coupled with a visa-free regime, have all strengthened the investment climate. Tokayev said Kazakhstan and China share vast untapped potential — and now is the time to unlock it.
Transport and logistics
Kazakhstan, as a close neighbor and reliable partner, fully supports and actively participates in President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative, Tokayev said. The country accounts for 85% of all continental freight between China and Europe. The commissioning of the second track on the Dostyk–Mointy railway this year will increase the corridor’s transit capacity fivefold.
Meanwhile, freight volumes along the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route grew 62% last year to 4.5 million tons, with a target of 10 million tons in the near future. President Tokayev noted that shipments through Kazakhstan’s Caspian ports, specifically Aktau and Kuryk, are also growing steadily. Additionally, key joint infrastructure projects, such as the Kazakhstan–China logistics terminal in Lianyungang and the dry port in Xi’an, are already operational.
“For Chinese companies, Kazakhstan’s transit potential opens tremendous opportunities,” Tokayev said.
Energy and nuclear cooperation
Tokayev outlined major projects in the energy sector, including a $7.4 billion polyethylene plant in the Atyrau region with Sinopec and the planned modernization of the Shymkent oil refinery with CNPC. Renewable projects are also in focus, including initiatives with China Power International Holding and China Energy, as well as the construction of a 160 MW gas-steam power plant in Mangystau with China Huadian Corporation.
He added that Kazakhstan and China agreed to expand cooperation in the nuclear industry, involving Chinese technologies and specialist training. CNNC will play a central role, while SANY Corporation continues to expand its presence in Kazakhstan’s energy market. Tokayev emphasized that traditional energy sources remain crucial to Kazakhstan’s security, but joint projects across the sector will strengthen the mutually beneficial partnership.
Large-scale mining and metallurgical projects with Chinese firms are underway, including Fujian Hengwang Investment’s steel plant in Zhambyl region (three million tons annual capacity) and Jiaxin International’s tungsten ore processing project in Almaty region.
In construction and manufacturing, Tokayev cited China Glass’s new glass plant, a forthcoming multi-brand auto plant in Almaty with a capacity of 120,000 vehicles annually, producing GWM, Chery, and Changan models, and a new BYD electric bus plant in the same city.
“These projects diversify Kazakhstan’s economy and expand its export-oriented base. These are only a few examples,” he said.
Adding momentum, Tokayev and Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang jointly inaugurated Kazakhstan’s first wind energy components plant in the Zhambyl region via videoconference. The facility, built through a partnership between Samruk-Kazyna and SANY Renewable Energy, will produce gondolas, hubs, towers, and other key components for wind farms, boosting Kazakhstan’s green energy capacity. Located in the Silk Road Special Economic Zone in Shu, it will play a vital role in expanding renewable energy across the country.
Agriculture and digital economy
Tokayev reminded that Kazakhstan is the world’s sixth-largest holder of arable land and a top-ten grain exporter, supplying over 10 million tons of wheat and 2 million tons of flour annually. He said Kazakhstan can supply up to 2 million tons of grain each year to China. Beyond exports, Kazakhstan seeks to develop joint processing industries, highlighting Dalian Group’s deep grain processing plant in Akmola region and Fufeng Group’s corn-processing project in Zhambyl region, aimed at exports to China and Europe. He also invited Chinese partners to cooperate in producing organic and high-quality livestock products.
On digitalization, Tokayev praised China’s global achievements in the field and cited forecasts that the AI market could reach $5 trillion by 2033, accounting for 30% of the global tech industry. He mentioned that at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Tianjin, he supported China’s initiative to establish a Global Organization for AI Cooperation. Kazakhstan, he added, is systematically developing its digital economy, having launched Central Asia’s first supercomputer and the Alem.AI International AI Center this year. The construction of Alatau City, envisioned as a hub for innovation, crypto, and tech entrepreneurship, is underway and will soon receive special ecosystem status.
Finance and investment
Tokayev also called for deepening cooperation in finance, noting that the Astana International Financial Centre now hosts over 4,200 companies from dozens of countries, including 850 from China. In partnership with leading Chinese banks, the Development Bank of Kazakhstan recently issued its debut eurobonds in Chinese yuan (Dim Sum bonds), a first for Central Asia, which strengthened international investor confidence in Kazakhstan’s financial system.
Tokayev emphasized that Kazakhstan has created the most favorable conditions for large-scale investments and ambitious projects. He assured Chinese business leaders that they will find reliable partners and unique opportunities in Kazakhstan.
“I am confident that the agreements reached today will boost economic interaction and give new momentum to our strategic partnership. These goals fully align with Kazakhstan’s national interests, which is why their implementation will remain under close attention of the top leadership,” he said.
The Kazakhstan–China Business Council concluded with the signing of over 70 commercial documents worth $15 billion.
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UK long-term borrowing costs on brink of 27-year high; gold price hits record – business live | Business

Key events
Traders have also been piling into silver, driving it over $40 per ounce for the first time since 2011.
KCM Trade’s chief market analyst, Tim Waterer, says:
“Silver is making a move higher in response to expectations of lower U.S. rates, while a tight supply market is helping to maintain an upward bias.”
Gold hits record high over $3,500/oz
The gold has hit a new alltime high, as traders turn to precious metals as a safe-haven asset in inflationary times.
While government bond prices are falling (driving up yields), the spot price of gold has climbed over the $3,500 mark to hit $3,508.50 an ounce early this morning, with investors flocking to this traditional safe-haven asset.
The rally comes as the markets anticipate interest rate cuts in the US later this year, which has weakened the dollar.
Traders have been piling into gold-focused exchange traded funds (ETFs), which lifts demand for the precious metals, while some central banks have been adding to their own holdings.
Worries about inflation have also lifted demand for gold, as Tony Sycamore, IG analyst, explains:
This week’s rally in gold and silver began mid-morning yesterday and coincided with a social media post by US President Trump who claimed that prices in the USA are “WAY DOWN” with virtually no inflation.
However, this narrative contrasts with recent economic data showing persistent inflationary pressures remain and comes as President Trump continues his dovish reshaping of the Fed Board as he pushes for sooner and deeper Fed interest rate cuts, into an economy which is growing at ~3.5% in Q3 according to the latest Atlanta Fed GDP Now reading
UK long-term borrowing costs on brink of 27-year high
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
The bond vigilantes are back, piling pressure on governments in London and Paris amid fears over fiscal sustainability.
The UK’s long-term cost of borrowing is on the verge of hitting its highest level since 1998. Yesterday the yield, or interest rate, on Britain’s 30-year debt rose as high as 5.646%, just a whisker from the 27-year high of 5.649% set during trading on 9th April.
That pushes up the cost of adding to Britain’s national debt, eating into the headroom available to chancellor Rachel Reeves as she draws up the autumn budget.
Bond vigilantes punish governments for what they consider to be bad policy choices, by shunning debt auctions or by demanding higher and higher rates of return before buying government bonds.
Fiscal concerns have been pushing up long-term borrowing costs globally in recent weeks; September is traditionally a tough month for the bond markets, so the next few weeks could be volatile.
UK debt is in the firing line due to fears that the economy will slow later this year, and that Reeves faces a budget black hole that will need to be filled through either tax rises or spending cuts.
As Deutsche Bank’s chief UK economist, Sanjay Raja, told clients:
At the risk of sounding a little dramatic, the Autumn Budget will be a defining moment for the UK. On our estimates, a fiscal hole worth GBP 20-25bn will need to be filled in November.
Kathleen Brooks of XTB says August was “dreadful” for UK bonds, explaining:
This summer’s drip feed of potential tax rises has not gone over well with voters, and Labour has been hemorrhaging support to Reform in recent weeks. Essentially voters don’t want tax rises, while Labour backbenchers don’t want spending cuts, but something will have to give.
Political turmoil in Paris has pushed France’s bond yields higher in recent weeks too, widening the gap with Germany. The French government could fall next week, if it loses a confidence vote called over unpopular spending cuts.
French 30-year bond yields hit a multi-year high of nearly 4.5% yesterday.
France’s 30-year government bond yield is now the highest since 2008 (green). We’re in a new world. COVID landed us with a global debt overhang. There’s no room for big deficits now, because markets’ appetite for more debt is low. The right response is to reform. Not cap yields. pic.twitter.com/jzYuD4evLy
— Robin Brooks (@robin_j_brooks) September 1, 2025
ING fear French bonds could continue to be pummelled by political uncertainty, telling clients:
The spread between French government bonds (OATs) and the German equivalent (Bunds) widened materially on the prospect of a confidence vote, and we still see the balance of risk tilted to further widening. The current 10Y spread is at a similar level to that seen in July 2024, when French President Emmanuel Macron called snap elections and OATs sold off significantly in response.
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