Located about 30 kilometers northeast of Tashkent, the project includes a newly built 334 MW/500 MWh electrochemical energy storage station, a 220 kV booster station, a 220 kV cable transmission line, and partial upgrades to secondary communication systems at the receiving. Located about 30 kilometers northeast of Tashkent, the project includes a newly built 334 MW/500 MWh electrochemical energy storage station, a 220 kV booster station, a 220 kV cable transmission line, and partial upgrades to secondary communication systems at the receiving. As part of Uzbekistan's efforts to expand renewable energy and modernize its power infrastructure, three agreements have been signed in Tashkent between Wind and Solarshine for Electricity Distribution Panels Manufacturing LLC and China Energy International Group. One of the agreements outlines. A new wind power plant with a capacity of 20 megawatts is set to be constructed in the Bostanlyk district of the Tashkent region, marking a milestone in Uzbekistan's push for renewable energy expansion. According to the Tashkent regional khokimiyat (city administration), regional governor Zoir. The Chinese Baibuting Group Co. 2-hectare project will be located in the Telyau neighborhood and will encompass several phases. Uzbekistan's Tashkent Solar Energy Storage Project, the largest electrochemical energy storage facility in Central Asia, was successfully connected to the grid on December 5. The storage facility is an EPC (engineering, procurement, and construction) project contracted by China Energy Engineering. The Tashkent solar energy storage project in Uzbekistan, led by China Energy Engineering Corporation, has made significant progress - the structural topping out of the energy storage station control building and the comprehensive completion of on-site dynamic compaction. The greenfield development will involve a 200 MW solar.