are thus at the core of the initiative, mainly by fostering sustainable economic
development through integrated border management (BOMCA, 2025). CADAP is the
Central Asia Drug Action Programme, an initiative of the EU to promote the development
of effective drug demand reduction policies in Central Asian countries. Also launched in
2003, it has been supporting the governments of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan in the implementation of strategies and measures to
reduce the demand for drugs, promoting prevention initiatives and improving the
treatment offered by public institutions to drug users in the region. Cooperation has
developed in the context of different projects and frameworks put forward in mutual
agreement (CADAP, 2025). The Law Enforcement in Central Asia project (LEICA) seeks
to build law enforcement capacities in the five Central Asian countries to enhance security
both on a national and regional level. In other words, the overall objective of LEICA is to
partner with Central Asian countries in order to prevent and to counter terrorist activity,
underlining the security considerations in the agenda (LEICA, 2024).
The energy landscape in Central Asia – where Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan
possess rich oil and gas reserves while Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan have abundant
hydropower resources – provides opportunities for the EU to reconstruct its energy
security narrative. These complementary resources align with the EU’s post-2022
narrative seeking stability and continuity by emphasising diversification, sustainability,
and reduced dependency on Russian supplies. The EU’s focus on renewable energy
partnerships with hydropower-rich Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, for instance, reinforces its
self-identity as a green transition leader. Similarly, its engagement with Kazakhstan on
both traditional and renewable energy sources allows the EU to narrate a transition story
that maintains continuity (energy security) while embracing change (diversification away
from Russia). For Central Asian states, their different energy profiles enable distinct
identity narratives: Tajikistan positions itself as a “green energy” leader, while
Kazakhstan balances its fossil fuel wealth with nuclear energy ambitions, each
constructing separate ontological security frameworks through energy diplomacy.
Indeed, with only a few wind and solar power plants operating within their territories,
Central Asian governments keep a strong drive on fossil fuels (Kedar, 2021). Regarding
gas reserves in the world, Turkmenistan ranks 5th (13.6 trillion m3), Kazakhstan ranks
15th (2.3 trillion m3), Uzbekistan ranks 18th (0.8 trillion m3), Tajikistan ranks 91st (6
billion m3), and Kyrgyzstan ranks 92nd (6 billion m3) (BP, 2022). In terms of oil reserves,
Kazakhstan ranks 12th (30 billion barrels), Turkmenistan ranks 50th (600 million
barrels), Uzbekistan ranks 51st (million barrels), Kyrgyzstan ranks 82nd (40 million
barrels), and Tajikistan ranks 93rd (12 million barrels) (EIA, 2023). In the EU, oil and
gas are scarce, with import coming from Russia, Asian countries, Norway and the United
States. Germany and France have large coal reserves, and the EU countries are trying
year after year to reduce the amount of coal-fired energy due to its high greenhouse gas
emissions. The EU has achieved unprecedented success in renewable energy, with
Sweden, Finland, Latvia, Denmark, Estonia, Austria, Albania, Montenegro, Portugal and
Lithuania being the leading countries in this area. Renewable energy in these countries
accounts for between 30 and 70 percent of the energy used (Eurostat, 2025).
As part of the European Green Deal, in order to encourage this smart sector integration,
the Commission presented an EU strategy for energy system integration in July 2020,
promoting direct electrification of end-use sectors and involving various existing and