Saudi-listed Acwa has signed $226 million of financing agreements for the Bash II 300 megawatts (MW) Wind Farm in Uzbekistan at the 2026 Asian Development Bank (ADB) Annual Meeting. 

The agreements were executed with three leading international lenders, including the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), and Standard Chartered Bank (SCB).

The total $226 million in senior debt financing represents more than two-thirds of the project’s total cost. 

Dr Samir Serhan, Chief Executive Officer of Acwa, said: “Bringing ADB, AIIB and Standard Chartered behind a single project in Central Asia is not routine - it reflects years of delivery on the ground and real confidence in Uzbekistan's reform trajectory. Bash II will put 300 MW of clean power into a grid that needs it, serving hundreds of thousands of households for the next 25 years. This is what long-term commitment to a market looks like in practice.”

Located in the Gijduvan District of the Bukhara region in Uzbekistan, Bash II will further strengthen the country’s clean energy portfolio by enhancing renewable power generation and supporting efforts to diversify the nation’s energy mix.

Building on the neighbouring Bash I wind farm, the project represents a key component of a larger renewable energy cluster taking shape in the region.

Underpinned by a 25-year power purchase agreement with the National Electric Grid of Uzbekistan (NEGU), Bash II is expected to commence commercial operations in the second half of 2027.

Once operational, it will supply electricity to more than 336,000 households and is expected to avoid approximately 475,000 tonnes of carbon emissions annually, supporting Uzbekistan’s efforts to meet its 2030 energy mix targets. -OGN/TradeArabia News Service