27.09.23

The second forum "German-Eurasian medium business" which held in Hamburg

26.09.23

ATTENTION ENTREPRENEURS AND INVESTORS!

28.07.23

The Uzbekistan-Hungary Business Forum took place in Budapest

28.07.23

The 8th session of the Uzbekistan-Hungary Intergovernmental Commission took place in Budapest

4.07.23

International Session "New Uzbekistan: favorable business environment"

23.01.17

Ministry of Internal Affairs

20.01.17

Министерство Минобороны Республики Узбекистан И активный

10.05.16

The Ministry for Development of Information Technologies and Communications of the Republic of Uzbekistan

11.12.15

Russian Federation

11.12.15

Ukraine

General information

Free industrial economic zone "Navoi"

FREE INDUSTRIAL ECONOMIC ZONE “NAVOI” DEGREE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN DECEMBER 2, 2008 No.UP-4059

Territory - 564 ha
Distance between Navoi and Tashkent – 490 km
Samarkand – 153 km
Bukhara – 110 km

Navoi FIEZ residents are exempted from:
Land tax - app.1500 USD for 1 ha
Property tax  - 3.5%
Profit (income) tax  - 9%
Unified tax (for SMEs) – 5%
Social infrastructure development tax – 8%
Obligatory payments to the Republican Road Fund (1-2.5%) and Republican Fund of Elementary and Secondary Education (0.5%)

7 years
if amount of direct investments is from 3 mln to 10 mln Euro

10 years and 50% reduction of profit tax for the following 5 years
if amount of direct investments is from 10 mln to 30 mln Euro

15 years and 50% reduction of profit tax for the following 10 years
if amount of direct investments is more than 30 mln. Euro

For the whole period of functioning enterprises are exempted from customs duties for imported:

  • Equipment
  • Raw materials
  • Production components
  • 100 % for goods aimed to exports
  • 50 % for goods aimed to domestic market with delay of payment period up to 180 days

NAVOI LOGISTIC CENTRE

In partnership with air cargo transportation leader Korean Air, Navoi airport has been modernized to create international multimodal logistics center.

 

  • 1st stage – Cargo processing ability – 300 tons/day
  • 2nd stage – Cargo processing ability –1000 tons/day
  • 1 399 cargo flights (2011)
  • Seoul, Milan, Brussels, Shanghai, Saragossa, Vena, Deli, Mumbai, Istanbul, Doha, Dubai, Hanoi, Moscow

Special industrial zone "Angren"

SPECIAL INDUSTRIAL ZONE “ANGREN” DEGREE OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN APRIL 13, 2012 No. UP-4434

Distance between  large cities:
Tashkent – 80 km
Ferghana – 240 km
Samarkand – 220 km

Pedagogical institute
1200 graduating students
9 colleges, including 5 in industry
3 131 graduating, including 1 537 in industry

SIZ “Angren” residents are exempted from:

Property tax  - 3.5%
Profit (income) tax  - 9%
Unified tax (for SMEs) – 5%
Social infrastructure development tax – 8%
Obligatory payments to the Republican Road Fund (1-2.5%)

Period of privileges and incentives:
3 years
if amount of direct investments is from 0.3 mln to 3 mln USD
5 years
if amount of direct investments is from 3 mln to 10 mln USD
7 years
if amount of direct investments is more than 10 mln. USD

Customs duties for imported equipment, raw materials, production components, not produced in Uzbekistan, by the degree of the Cabinet Ministers

Special industrial zone "Jizzakh"

Jizzakh (UzbekJizzax / Жиззах; Russian: Джизак) is a city (population 138,400 in 2004) and the center of Jizzakh Region in Uzbekistan, northeast of Samarkand.The population of Jizzax on April 24, 2014 is approximately 152,642.[1]

Jizzakh was an important Silk Road junction on the road connecting Samarkand with Fergana Valley. It is at the edge of Golodnaya Steppe, and next to the strategic Pass of Jilanuti (Timur's Gate) in the Turkestan Mountains, controlling the approach to the Zeravshan Valley, Samarkand and Bukhara.

The name Jizzakh derives from the Sogdian word for "small fort" and the present city is built of the site of the Sogdian town of Osrūshana. After the Arab conquest of Sogdiana, Jizzakh served as a market town between the nomadic raiders and settled farmers. The Arabs built a series of rabats (blockhouses) at Jizzakh, housing ghazis to protect the people. By the 19th century, these blockhouses had evolved into a major fortress for the Emirate of BukharaRussian General Mikhail Chernyayev, the “Lion of Tashkent” failed in his first attempt to take Jizzakh, but succeed in his second try, with a loss of 6 men, against 6000 dead for the defenders. The old town was mostly destroyed, its remaining inhabitants evicted, and Russian settlers brought in.[2]

In 1916, Jizzakh was the center of an anti-Russian uprising, which was quickly suppressed. In 1917, Jizzakh most famous native son, Sharof Rashidov, future secretary of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan, was born.

Modern Jizzakh is quietly tree-lined European, with almost nothing remaining of the pre-Rashidov era. The city has two universities, with a total of approximately 7,000 students, and is home to a football team, Sogdiana Jizzakh, which plays in the Uzbek League (Oliy Liga).  more about Jizzakh

 

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