Japan sets $19 billion business target in Central Asia

Japan unveiled a five-year goal on Saturday for business projects totaling $19 billion in Central Asia as Tokyo seeks greater influence in the resource-rich region. The announcement followed Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's hosting of an inaugural summit with leaders from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan in Tokyo. The move aims to diversify supplies of rare earths and reduce dependence on China.

Japan unveiled a five-year goal on Saturday for business projects totaling $19 billion in Central Asia, aiming to boost its influence in the resource-rich region. The announcement came after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi hosted an inaugural summit in Tokyo with leaders from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan.

A joint statement declared that Japan "set a new target of business projects at a total amount of 3 trillion yen in 5 years in Central Asia." Like the United States and the European Union, Japan is attracted to the region's vast, largely untapped natural resources to diversify rare earth supplies and lessen reliance on China.

"It is important for Central Asia, blessed with abundant resources and energy sources, to expand its access to international markets," the statement noted. The leaders agreed to promote cooperation for strengthening critical minerals supply chains, while committing to economic growth and decarbonization.

They also held separate summits this year with Russia's Vladimir Putin, China's Xi Jinping, and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen. Tomohiko Uyama, a professor at Hokkaido University specializing in Central Asian politics, told AFP: "Natural resources have become a strong focus, particularly in the past year, because of China's moves involving rare earths," referring to Beijing's tight export controls introduced this year.

The leaders agreed to expand cooperation on the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route, a logistics network to Europe bypassing Russia, and efforts toward "safe, secure, and trustworthy Artificial Intelligence."

Tokyo has long urged Japanese businesses to invest in the region, though they remain cautious. China, which borders Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan, positions itself as a key commercial partner through massive infrastructure projects; Xi visited Astana in June. The former Soviet republics still view Moscow as a strategic partner but have been wary since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Kazakhstan is the world's top uranium producer, Uzbekistan holds vast gold reserves, and Turkmenistan is rich in gas. Mountainous Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are developing new mineral deposits, but exploitation is challenging in these impoverished, remote terrains.

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Illustration of international experts at the Tokyo Economic Security Forum discussing supply chain security and strategic materials amid global trade tensions.
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Tokyo hosts inaugural economic security forum

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Japan's government is hosting the inaugural Tokyo Economic Security Forum on December 15 in Tokyo. Amid global uncertainties from the US-China trade war and high tariffs under the Trump administration, experts from around the world will discuss securing strategic materials and protecting supply chains. The importance of public-private collaboration is highlighted.

Building on plans for next week's G7 finance ministers' meeting, Japan is pursuing broader diplomatic outreach. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama heads to the US starting Sunday for critical minerals talks, Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi meets his US counterpart Thursday, and Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will summit with South Korea's Lee Jae-myung next week.

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Amid ongoing China-Japan tensions sparked by Sanae Takaichi's prior Taiwan remarks, Japan is bolstering ties with South Korea while facing Beijing's new export curbs on rare earths and dual-use items, prompting stockpiling and G7 coordination.

A Yomiuri Shimbun editorial on January 1, 2026, stresses that amid ongoing global conflicts, Japan must transition from beneficiary to shaper of the international order. It calls for bolstering intellectual strength, economic and technological power, and communicative abilities to lead in forming a new order for peace and stability.

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Tokyo Gas plans to allocate more than half of its overseas investments over the next three years to the US to drive growth. CEO Shinichi Sasayama highlighted North America as the top priority, citing rising demand from data centers and semiconductor plants.

Around 50 government officials, researchers, and others from Japan and India gathered in New Delhi for a meeting to discuss promoting economic security cooperation between the two countries. Participants confirmed the importance of establishing supply chains spanning both nations for strategic materials like semiconductors and rare earth minerals. Both countries face the shared challenge of diversifying supply chains amid China's export restrictions on rare earths and the protectionist high-tariff policies of U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.

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South Korean and Japanese business lobbies met on Jeju Island to discuss ways to enhance cooperation in artificial intelligence and semiconductors. The two sides addressed shared challenges like population decline. They issued a joint statement vowing to build stable investment environments and supply chains.

 

 

 

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