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Developing a power or renewable energy project in Kazakhstan requires navigating two parallel permission tracks, land allocation through the local executive body (akimat) and construction permits issued under Ministry of Industry and Construction rules, alongside a series of sectoral approvals from the Ministry of Energy, environmental regulators and grid operators. Understanding how to get land allocation and construction permits for energy projects in Kazakhstan is essential for any sponsor, EPC contractor or foreign investor preparing to site and build a generation facility in 2026. The process was materially amended by Minister of Energy Order No.
152‑n/k of 14 April 2026, which changed documentary thresholds, application sequences and procedural dates for energy-related approvals, with provisions entering force on a staged basis between June and July 2026. This guide sets out the complete procedure, eligibility checks, step-by-step approvals, required documents, realistic timelines, indicative costs and the specific 2026 regulatory changes, in a single, practitioner-level reference.
Every energy project in Kazakhstan, whether a solar farm, wind park, conventional gas-fired plant, or combined heat-and-power facility, must secure rights to use land and obtain formal permission to commence construction before breaking ground. The permitting architecture runs along two tracks that proceed partly in parallel:
Layered on top of these two tracks are sectoral approvals that vary by project type: an environmental impact assessment (EIA) where required by environmental legislation, a grid connection offer from the relevant network operator coordinated through the Settlement and Financial Center (RFC), a power generation licence from the Ministry of Energy for certain facility types, and sanitary-epidemiological and fire safety clearances. The 2026 changes introduced by Order No.152‑n/k affect how several of these approvals interact and what documentary proof sponsors must submit, a point addressed in detail below.
This procedure applies to all generation projects sited on Kazakhstani territory, including renewables selected through the RFC auction mechanism, conventional power plants developed under bilateral agreements, and hybrid or storage-integrated facilities. Offshore and geothermal projects face additional permitting layers (maritime or subsoil use permits) that are noted in the relevant steps.
Not all land in Kazakhstan is available for energy project development. Applicants must confirm that the target site falls within a permissible land category under the Land Code. Land classified as agricultural, forest fund, specially protected natural territory, or water fund is subject to restrictions or outright prohibitions on conversion to industrial or energy infrastructure use. Before initiating a formal application, sponsors should request a zoning confirmation from the relevant akimat’s architecture and urban planning department to verify the land category, any existing encumbrances, and compatibility with energy facility construction.
Foreign nationals and foreign-incorporated entities may obtain land-use rights for energy projects, but the form of tenure differs from that available to Kazakhstani citizens. Foreign investors may acquire private ownership of land plots designated for construction or industrial use. However, agricultural land cannot be privately owned by foreign persons, it may only be leased, typically for terms of up to 25 years with extension options. For most utility-scale energy projects, foreign sponsors secure long-term leases of 25 to 49 years from the akimat, which are registerable and bankable for project finance purposes.
Additional steps for foreign investors include apostille and notarised translation of corporate documents, registration of a local representative office or subsidiary, and, where the project is in a special economic zone, compliance with zone-specific investor rules.
Before submitting the formal land allocation application, sponsors should complete several preparatory assessments:
The construction permit process for energy projects in Kazakhstan follows a six-step sequence. Several steps run concurrently, the EIA process, for example, can overlap with grid connection studies. The table below summarises the full sequence; detailed guidance for each step follows.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Secure site control (lease or purchase) | Project sponsor / akimat / landowner (lawyer coordinates) | 4–12 weeks |
| 2. Apply for land allocation / land-use right | Local akimat (applicant submits via sponsor) | 15–60 business days (regional variation) |
| 3. Engineering survey and EIA scoping / submission | Sponsor / EIA contractor / Ministry of Ecology | EIA scoping: 2–6 weeks; full EIA: 3–6 months |
| 4. Apply for construction permit | Local construction authority / Ministry where applicable | Statutory window: 15 business days (may extend to 30 for complex projects) |
| 5. Grid connection and generation licence | RFC / grid operator / Ministry of Energy | Grid studies: 2–6 months; licence timelines vary |
| 6. Final inspections and permit to use | Local inspectorates (fire, sanitary) / akimat or Ministry | 2–6 weeks |
The first step is to obtain legal control over the project site. For state-owned land, this means negotiating a lease agreement with the akimat. For privately held land, it means executing a sale or lease contract with the landowner. In either case, legal counsel should conduct a title search through the Land Cadastre to confirm the land is free of encumbrances, liens, or competing claims. Pre-contract conditions should address zoning confirmation, access rights, and any demolition or remediation obligations. For auction winners under the RFC renewable energy programme, the auction documentation may specify a designated area or region, but the sponsor remains responsible for identifying and securing the specific plot.
This step typically takes 4 to 12 weeks depending on the complexity of negotiations and the availability of suitable parcels.
With site control secured, the sponsor submits a formal application to the local akimat for land allocation or confirmation of land-use rights. The application package includes the cadastral plan, a statement of intended use (specifying energy infrastructure), the company’s incorporation documents, and a summary of the proposed project (typically the feasibility study or Pre-FEED document). The akimat reviews the application against zoning rules, infrastructure capacity and environmental constraints. Processing times vary by region, the statutory window is 15 business days for straightforward allocations, but complex applications or those requiring inter-agency consultation may take up to 60 business days. Upon approval, the akimat issues a land allocation decision, which must be registered with the Land Cadastre to become legally effective.
Once land-use rights are in place, the sponsor commissions engineering surveys (geotechnical, hydrological, topographical) needed for project design. In parallel, if the project triggers environmental assessment requirements, the sponsor engages an accredited EIA contractor to prepare the environmental impact assessment. The EIA process includes a scoping phase (2–6 weeks), a desk study and field investigation, and a public consultation period. The completed EIA is submitted to the relevant environmental authority, typically the regional department of the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources, or the Committee for Environmental Regulation for projects of national significance. The full EIA cycle for a utility-scale energy project commonly takes 3 to 6 months.
Projects below the environmental significance threshold may require only an environmental clearance rather than a full EIA.
The construction permit application is submitted to the local construction authority (the architecture and urban planning department of the akimat) or, for nationally significant projects, through the channels specified by the Ministry of Industry and Construction. The application requires complete design documentation, architectural, structural and MEP drawings, cost estimates, and fire safety and sanitary calculations, all prepared by certified Kazakhstani design organisations or foreign designers whose qualifications have been recognised. The statutory window for the construction permit decision is 15 business days, although a longer period of up to 30 business days is permitted for complex applications. Construction may not lawfully commence until the permit is issued.
Starting works before the permit is a common, and costly, pitfall that can result in fines, stop-work orders and demolition requirements.
The sponsor applies for grid connection through the relevant regional electricity network operator, with coordination through the RFC where the project was selected via the auction mechanism. The grid connection application must include the project’s generation capacity, single-line diagrams, and evidence of land-use rights or a lease agreement for the project site. Network impact studies typically take 2 to 6 months depending on the complexity of the proposed connection and the condition of the local grid. For projects requiring a power generation licence, the application is submitted to the Ministry of Energy or the relevant licensing body. The licence requirement depends on the project’s installed capacity and technology type.
The step-by-step process for grid connection in Kazakhstan is covered in a separate procedural guide.
After construction is complete, the facility must pass a series of inspections before commercial operation can begin. These include fire safety inspection, sanitary-epidemiological inspection, and a technical commissioning inspection conducted by the relevant state authorities. Upon successful completion of all inspections, the akimat or Ministry (depending on project significance) issues the permit to use (разрешение на ввод в эксплуатацию). For facilities incorporating hazardous production equipment, such as high-pressure gas turbines or chemical storage, separate permits to use from the industrial safety authority may be required. This final phase typically takes 2 to 6 weeks.
The documents needed for land allocation and construction permits for a power plant in Kazakhstan are substantial. The following table consolidates the full documentary checklist across the permitting sequence. Sponsors should prepare all documents in the required language (Kazakh and/or Russian, with certified translations of foreign-language originals) and ensure notarisation and apostille where foreign documents are involved.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Application for land allocation / land-use permission | Submitted to local akimat; must include the cadastral number, site plan, FEED summary and company registration documents. Kazakh/Russian translations required for foreign-language submissions. |
| Proof of site control (lease agreement or sale contract) | Lease with akimat or private owner; must be registerable with Land Cadastre. Typical lease terms for energy projects: 25–49 years. |
| Cadastral plan and site technical map | Prepared by an authorised surveyor; required for cadastre registration. |
| Company incorporation documents and director identification | Company extract or equivalent; notarised and apostilled where foreign-originated. |
| Feasibility study / Pre-FEED summary | Prepared by sponsor or technical consultant; required for large projects and auction winners. |
| Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) or EIA scoping report | Prepared by accredited EIA contractor; must include public consultation record. Submitted to Ministry of Ecology or regional environmental authority. |
| Design documentation (project and estimate documentation) | Full architectural, structural and MEP design; cost estimates; fire safety and sanitary calculations. Prepared by certified designers. |
| Grid connection application and technical conditions | Submitted to RFC / regional grid operator. Includes generation capacity data and single-line diagrams. |
| Sanitary-epidemiological conclusion | Issued by the local sanitary authority; required for commissioning. |
| Fire safety approval | Issued by the local fire service; required for both the construction permit and the permit to use. |
| Permit to use (разрешение на ввод в эксплуатацию) | Issued after successful inspections. Separate permits may be required for hazardous production equipment. |
| Power generation licence (where applicable) | Issued by the Ministry of Energy or relevant licensing body; requirement depends on project scale and technology. |
The overall duration from initial site identification to permit-to-use issuance for a medium-scale energy project in Kazakhstan is typically 6 to 18 months, depending on the project’s complexity, the region, and the efficiency of inter-agency coordination. The following timeline table sets out a recommended approvals schedule against calendar milestones.
| Phase | Recommended start | Estimated completion |
|---|---|---|
| Site control and due diligence | Month 1 | Month 2–3 |
| Land allocation application and akimat decision | Month 2 | Month 4–5 |
| EIA scoping and full EIA submission (if required) | Month 2 (concurrent) | Month 5–8 |
| Design documentation and construction permit | Month 5 | Month 6–7 |
| Grid connection studies and licence applications | Month 3 (concurrent) | Month 6–9 |
| Final inspections and permit to use | Post-construction | 2–6 weeks after construction completion |
Key statutory deadlines and 2026 dates to note:
The costs associated with land allocation and construction permits for energy projects in Kazakhstan comprise government administrative fees, professional service costs and project-specific charges. The following table provides indicative ranges. All figures should be verified with the relevant akimat and regulatory body, as fee schedules vary by region and may be affected by the 2026 ministerial order amendments.
| Item | Indicative amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Land lease or right-of-use fee | Varies, regional market rates or akimat auction reserve | Verify with akimat land valuation department. Rates differ significantly between regions (e.g., Almaty vs. Mangystau). |
| Cadastre registration fee | Modest administrative fee | Set by local akimat fee schedule. |
| Construction permit administrative fee | Minor administrative fee | Separate from professional design certification costs. Verify with local construction authority. |
| EIA / environmental consultant | US$20,000–US$200,000+ | Depends on project scale, scope of field investigation and public consultation requirements. |
| Grid connection study and application | US$10,000–US$100,000+ | Varies with network impact study complexity. Some study fees may be refundable. |
| Legal and transaction costs | Project-dependent | Retainer plus milestone-based fees. Typical project counsel quoted per engagement. |
| Translation, notarisation and apostille | US$500–US$5,000 | For foreign sponsor documents requiring certified Kazakh/Russian translations. |
From a tax perspective, energy project investors should be aware that Kazakhstan applies VAT at the standard rate on most services (including professional consulting and construction services), and corporate income tax applies to profits generated by the project company. Renewable energy projects may qualify for certain incentives under the Law on Support of the Use of Renewable Energy Sources, including priority grid dispatch and guaranteed tariffs for auction winners. Tax structuring should be addressed with qualified legal counsel familiar with Kazakhstan’s energy sector.
Order No.152‑n/k, signed by the Minister of Energy on 14 April 2026 and published on the Adilet national legislation portal, introduces amendments to the application steps, documentary thresholds and procedural dates for energy and energy-related approvals in Kazakhstan. The order’s provisions enter force on a staged basis, with certain clauses effective from 21 June 2026 and further provisions from 11 July 2026.
The likely practical effects of the 2026 changes include:
Sponsors and their legal advisers should consult the full annotated text of Order No.152‑n/k on the Adilet portal to confirm which clauses apply to their project timeline. Companion annotations are available on the CIS-Legislation portal. The order’s impact on specific licence categories and submission forms should be verified directly with the Ministry of Energy.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Madiyar Bekturganov at Zan Hub LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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