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Steppe Ahead - The Central Asia Podcast
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Steppe Ahead - The Central Asia Podcast

Author: Jonas Prien, Thorsten Gutmann & Thomas Baier

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Steppe Ahead – The Central Asia Podcast

Insights from the heart of Eurasia

By Jonas Prien, Thorsten Gutmann and Thomas Baier

Central Asia is one of the world’s most dynamic and most overlooked regions. With ambitious young people, rapidly growing economies, dynamic investments, and some of the world’s most strategic trade routes and natural resources crossing its vast landscape, the region is becoming increasingly important to global business and geopolitics. Still, it receives the attention it deserves.

Steppe Ahead aims to change that! 

Each episode explores key developments shaping Central Asia from Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan to Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Azerbaijan. The podcast breaks down markets, politics, and regional trends through the perspectives of regional experts.

For anyone who wants to understand Central Asia before it becomes impossible to ignore.

New episodes? Whenever the region gives us something worth talking about!

5 Episodes
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In this episode of the Steppe Ahead podcast, Jonas Thorsten and Thomas talk about the Kazakh car market and how Thorsten’s viral video highlighted the rapid change and what it means for German cars. They also discuss the absence of Kazakh on Duolingo, the rise of local AI-based apps like Alim and growing interest in learning Kazakh, and the ongoing debate over Latinization versus Cyrillic.00:00 Welcome to Steppe Ahead00:46 Today’s Topics Preview01:39 Viral Kazakh Car Market06:08 Why Chinese Cars Win10:37 Prices and Models Compared16:10 Local Production and Investment18:37 Old Cars and Fleet Changes21:03 Language Apps in Central Asia26:21 Kazakh Learning Boom30:14 Alphabet Latinization Debate31:56 Episode Wrap Up and Next Topics
In this episode of the Steppe Ahead podcast, Jonas shares impressions from the Leipzig Book Fair, noting 300,000 visitors and discussing Central Asian literature, including classic writers Mukhtar Auezov and Chingiz Aitmatov, and the Kazakh Library translation project, The conversation then shifts to Kazakhstan’s plan to build Alatau City near Almaty to relieve overcrowding, traffic, and pollution, with ambitions for a finance and business hub, special economic zone incentives, major construction partners, earthquake-mitigation technology, and targets of millions of residents, tourists, and jobs by 2050. They also discuss innovative mobility ideas such as air taxis linking Almaty, mountain resorts, and Alatau. Finally, the hosts examine EU–Central Asia relations, contrasting EU free trade momentum elsewhere with enhanced partnership agreements in Central Asia and highlighting visa facilitation talks, while noting hurdles like differing regulations and Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan’s membership in the Eurasian Economic Union.00:00 Mic Check and Welcome00:26 Leipzig Book Fair Highlights01:44 Central Asian Authors to Know03:52 Book Picks and Kazakh Library06:56 Why Central Asia Is Underrepresented09:06 Alatau City Vision11:27 How Alatau Will Work16:01 Funding Targets and Realism17:53 Almaty Traffic and Air Taxis21:16 EU and Central Asia Trade Talks26:23 Visa Facilitation and Fairness32:07 Wrap Up and Goodbye
Jonas, Thorsten, and Thomas discuss Nowruz, the Persian “new day” spring festival, its 3,000-year-old origins, Soviet-era public ban, and current Kazakh traditions such as Nauryz kozhe, yurts, wearing traditional clothes, settling debts, and making peace before the holiday, alongside its timing near the end of Ramadan and its spread across Iran, Central Asia, and nearby regions. They then cover Uzbekistan’s long WTO accession process, including bilateral talks with 34 parties and expectations of joining in 2026, weighing risks to protected industries against benefits like higher standards, investor confidence, and a cited German Economic Team estimate of +0.4% real GDP growth per year from liberalization.01:01 What Is Nowruz04:17 Traditions and Food07:23 Nowruz and Ramadan09:22 Why It Spreads13:30 Uzbekistan WTO Push17:58 Risks and Benefits23:50 GDP Study Findings26:49 Tourism Teaser Wrap
In this episode, Thorsten, Jonas and Thomas discuss Kazakhstan’s referendum on a new constitution that would take effect July 1, dissolve the current parliament, and trigger new elections. They also cover Uzbekistan’s super app Uzum, which secured a huge investment from Oman’s sovereign wealth fund plus investment from Tencent, reaching a $2.3 billion valuation. Finally, they examine Russia’s McDonald’s successor, “Vkusno i Tochka”, expanding into Kyrgyzstan as a test market.
The hosts Jonas, Thorsten, and Thomas discuss how landlocked Central Asian economies rely on transit routes such as the Turkmenistan–Iran rail link and warn that disrupted oil supply could push prices above $200 per barrel, worsening inflation for energy importers like Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan while creating mixed, risky effects for exporters such as Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. The conversation highlights growing importance of the Middle Corridor logistics route and notes Kazakhstan’s continued dependence on food imports despite some export potential. Jonas reviews the Aral Sea disaster caused by Soviet-era irrigation and cotton projects, describing partial recovery since the 2005 Kok-Aral dam, including rising water levels, reduced salinity, and returning fish species.00:00 Welcome to the Podcast00:34 Iran Conflict Impact03:05 Show Format and Topics03:43 Aral Sea Story Setup04:40 Central Asia Business Case08:10 Oil Shock and Region Risks16:13 Middle Corridor Logistics18:16 Food Imports and Security21:13 Aral Sea History and Recovery29:11 Wrap Up and Takeaways
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