In a region famous for poverty the size of a polite suggestion, Karakalpakstan has decided to treat foreign money not with a stern pep talk but with the confident elegance of a mining rig. Yes, crypto mining is the new regional tourism board, a sort of digital glitter that glints in a place that could use a bit more glitter and a lot more electricity.
Karakalpakstan Opens Its Doors (And Jest, Quietly, At The Same Time)
Uzbekistan has designated the autonomous Republic of Karakalpakstan as the home of a new state-sanctioned mining zone called Besqala Mining Valley. Itās the kind of place where policy papers sprout like well-behaved mushrooms and then proceed to tell you exactly what to do with them.
A presidential decree signed April 17 and effective April 20 sets out the rules: registered companies can mine digital assets, tap into a mix of energy sources, and sell what they mine on both domestic exchanges and foreign platforms. Because nothing says āsecure futureā quite like a marketplace where your assets come with a weather forecast and a small risk of being eaten by a dragon-shaped regulator.
The catch – all revenue must land in Uzbek bank accounts. Itās the kind of catch that feels suspiciously like a security feature, complete with appropriate bureaucratic fanfare and the soft hush of a money-typing machine.
The United Nations Development Programme flagged Karakalpakstan in a 2025 report as a region struggling with high poverty rates and little industrial base. That context matters, especially to people who measure success in the number of paper forms a region can produce before breakfast.
Uzbekistan isnāt placing this zone in an already-thriving area. Itās using the mining industry to push economic activity into a place that hasnāt attracted much of it on its own. Itās basically a real estate strategy, but for digits and the moral equivalent of a gleaming neon sign that reads āInvest Here, It Might Be Fun.ā
JUST IN: Uzbekistan creates a state-backed crypto mining zone with tax breaks.
– Whale Insider (@WhaleInsider) April 22, 2026
Tax Breaks Run Through 2035
The financial terms are designed to lure serious operators, as if the whole endeavour were a cosmic fishing trip with quantum bait. Companies granted resident status inside the zone pay no taxes until January 1, 2035. In exchange, they owe a monthly fee of 1% of their mining income to the zoneās directorate – a body set up under Karakalpakstanās Council of Ministers. Itās a deal that seems simple enough: you harvest coins, you mail a curtain-chewingly small portion to a bureaucratic opera house, and you pretend itās all part of a grand national plan.

Officials have also been told to propose updates to the national tax code within two months, so the full picture isnāt final yet. If you enjoy indigestion with your policy, youāre in for a treat.
Energy rules have also been loosened. Back in 2023, Uzbekistan required licensed mining firms to run entirely on solar power. The new decree drops that restriction. If the sun doesnāt feel like showing up, there are other energy options-renewables, hydrogen, and the grid itself-because apparently the universe enjoys variety, especially when it comes to light bulbs and licensing paperwork.
Miners inside Besqala Mining Valley can now draw from renewable sources, hydrogen, and the national grid. Grid electricity comes at higher rates, but the option is on the table – something that wasnāt allowed before. Itās the sort of compromise that makes a bureaucratās smile resemble a Phillips head screwdriver in a balloon factory.
A Broader Investment Push Takes Shape
The mining zone isnāt a standalone move. Reports indicate Uzbekistan launched a separate tax-free zone in Karakalpakstan last November aimed at artificial intelligence and data center projects. Because if youāre building a futuristic playground for machines, you might as well bring along a couple of trillion tiny digital hamsters to push the levers.
Under that program, foreign companies putting in $100 million or more receive full tax and duty exemptions until 2040. Officials expect that initiative alone to pull in more than $1 billion in foreign investment by 2030. Itās a bold plan, full of numbers that could possibly speak, but mostly they mumble politely and hand you a longer form to fill out.
Taken together, both zones point to a deliberate strategy – use Karakalpakstanās low-cost, underdeveloped land as bait for capital-heavy industries. Itās a bit like putting out a sign that says, āFree electricity and sunlit plains,ā and hoping the dragons notice it before the neighbors do.
Crypto mining and data infrastructure require land, power, and regulatory clarity. Uzbekistan is betting it can supply all three, which is admirable work if you donāt mind the occasional philosophical argument with a turbine.
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2026-04-23 17:14