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how to participate in renewable energy auctions Kazakhstan 2026

How to Participate in Kazakhstan's 2026 Renewable‑energy Auctions: Step‑by‑step Guide for Developers

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to participate in renewable energy auctions Kazakhstan 2026 is now a practical priority for every independent power producer, project sponsor and development‑finance counsel tracking Central Asia. The Republic’s Settlement and Financial Center (RFC) has published auction lots scheduled between 27 April and 18 May 2026, covering wind and solar projects within a broader programme targeting approximately 915 MW of new capacity. A Minister of Energy order dated 14 April 2026 (Order No. 152‑n/k) introduced changes to eligibility requirements and contracting steps that bidders must incorporate before submitting their applications.

This guide sets out the complete procedure, from eligibility checks and document assembly through bid submission, post‑award PPA negotiation and the pathway to financing close, so that developers can approach the 2026 auction timeline with confidence.

Overview of the Auction Process and Who It Applies To

Kazakhstan procures utility‑scale renewable‑energy capacity through competitive, price‑based auctions organised by the RFC, acting under the oversight of the Ministry of Energy and the market operator NC KOREM. The single buyer procurement model means that the successful bidder signs a power purchase agreement (PPA) with the centralised off‑taker at the auction‑determined tariff, providing a guaranteed revenue stream for the project term.

Two principal auction formats are in use for the 2026 cycle. The first is a traditional lot format, in which the auction organiser specifies the project location, grid connection point and land plot. The second, expanded from earlier rounds, is an open lot format that permits bidders to propose their own land plot and connection point, provided they submit compliant land title evidence. Both formats follow the RFC auction procedure published on the RFC auctions materials page.

The April–May 2026 schedule covers multiple technology lots. Published auction notices list wind and solar projects across several regions, with individual lots ranging up to 250 MW. Bidders must monitor the Kazakh Invest auction calendar and the RFC platform for the definitive lot list, lot‑specific bid security amounts and submission deadlines.

The process applies to any legal entity, domestic or foreign, that meets the auction requirements Kazakhstan imposes for bid qualification. The sections below explain each step in sequence.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Bid Qualification in Kazakhstan

Before assembling bid documents, developers must confirm that they satisfy every eligibility criterion. Failure at this stage is the single most common reason bids are rejected. The rules derive from the statutory auction procedure registered on the Adilet legal database and are supplemented by Order No. 152‑n/k (14 April 2026), which modifies certain qualification and contracting requirements for the current cycle.

Foreign Applicants, How to Qualify

Foreign developers and international IPPs are expressly permitted to bid. In practice, most foreign participants take one of two routes:

  • Local subsidiary. Incorporate a Kazakh limited liability partnership (TOO) or joint‑stock company (AO) and bid through that entity. Corporate documents, including the charter and certificate of state registration, must be submitted in Kazakh or Russian (or with certified translations).
  • Joint venture with a local partner. A JV with a Kazakh entity can satisfy local‑presence expectations and may assist with land acquisition and permitting. The JV agreement and ownership structure must be disclosed as part of the KYC/UBO pack.

In either case, foreign corporate documents, certificates of incorporation, board resolutions, powers of attorney, must be notarised, apostilled and translated. Industry observers expect the 2026 cycle to continue permitting wholly foreign‑owned bidding entities, though developers should verify any changes introduced by Order No. 152‑n/k before submission.

Technical and Financial Capability

Bidders must demonstrate that they possess the technical and financial capacity to deliver the project. The auction requirements Kazakhstan applies typically include:

  • Track record. Evidence of prior renewable‑energy project development, construction or operation (capacity and technology relevant to the lot).
  • Financial standing. Audited financial statements for the preceding two to three years, showing adequate capitalisation or access to project finance.
  • Technical proposal. A site plan, equipment specification and preliminary grid‑connection assessment that demonstrates the project’s technical feasibility.
  • Land rights. For open‑lot auctions, proof of a Land Code‑compliant title or lease; for traditional lots, acknowledgement of the designated plot.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure: How to Participate in Renewable Energy Auctions Kazakhstan 2026

The RFC auction procedure follows a structured sequence. Each step below identifies the responsible party and a typical duration range. Exact deadlines are published in each lot’s auction notice, always treat those as authoritative.

Step 1, Select the Auction Lot and Complete Pre‑Bid Due Diligence

Review the lot materials published on the RFC auctions materials page. For each lot, confirm the technology (wind or solar), nameplate capacity, grid connection point, designated or permitted land plot and any lot‑specific environmental or permitting constraints. Developer technical and legal teams should:

  1. Download the lot information pack and auction notice from the RFC platform.
  2. Verify the grid connection point with the relevant regional grid operator or distribution company; request a preliminary grid study if one has not been published.
  3. If the lot uses the open format, confirm that your land title or lease is Land Code‑compliant and that the plot is zoned for energy infrastructure.
  4. Conduct an initial environmental screening and identify whether an environmental impact assessment is required before construction.

Who: Developer technical and legal teams, with engagement from RFC / KOREM for lot‑specific clarifications.
Typical duration: 1–6 weeks, depending on site complexity and whether the lot uses the open or traditional format.

Step 2, Arrange Pre‑Qualification Documents and Bid Security

This is the most document‑intensive step. The developer must assemble the full pre‑qualification pack (see the required documents table below) and arrange bid security in an acceptable form. The RFC accepts bank guarantees and cash deposits; the format and required wording for bank guarantees are specified on the RFC financial support page. The bid security amount is stated in each lot’s auction notice and varies by project size.

  1. Instruct an approved bank to issue the bid security in the RFC‑prescribed format; allow two to four weeks for the bank’s internal credit approval.
  2. Prepare corporate, financial and technical documents, with all required translations, notarisations and apostilles.
  3. Complete the bid submission form using the RFC template and have it executed by the authorised signatory.
  4. Arrange a notarised power of attorney if the authorised signatory will not personally attend the electronic platform.

Who: Developer, issuing bank, legal counsel.
Typical duration: 2–4 weeks.

Step 3, Submit the Bid and Participate in the Electronic Auction

Upload the complete bid package to the RFC electronic platform before the deadline stated in the auction notice. Pre‑qualification documents and bid security evidence are typically due one to two weeks before the auction date. On auction day:

  1. Log in to the RFC platform at the published start time (examples from the 2026 schedule indicate 15:00 Astana time for certain lots).
  2. Follow the descending‑price or single‑price procedure specified for the lot. Some lots use timed bidding rounds with three‑ or five‑minute intervals.
  3. Record the final bid price. The platform will generate a confirmation protocol.
  4. Await the auction organiser’s post‑auction verification and award announcement, which is typically issued on the same day or within one to three business days.

Who: Developer bidding team and lead counsel.
Typical duration: Auction date plus immediate confirmation window (same day to three days).

Step 4, Post‑Award Qualification, PPA Signature and Contract Mobilisation

If the bid is successful, the developer enters the PPA post‑award process. This stage converts an auction award into a bankable project and involves several parallel workstreams:

  1. Execute remaining post‑award qualification documents required by the RFC and the single buyer.
  2. Negotiate and sign the PPA (or framework contract) with the single buyer/RFC within the window stated in the auction notice, typically two to six weeks after the award announcement.
  3. Provide performance security in the form and amount specified in the PPA (often a percentage of total contract value).
  4. Commence licensing and permitting: construction permit, environmental approvals, land‑use finalisation.
  5. Conclude the grid connection agreement with the relevant grid operator and initiate EPC contracting.
  6. If project‑financed, begin lender due diligence and work towards financing close.

Who: Developer, single buyer / RFC, lenders, EPC contractor, local authorities.
Typical duration: PPA signature within 2–6 weeks; financing close, EPC contracting and permitting through to commercial operation date (COD) typically 6–18+ months depending on project scale.

Auction Procedure at a Glance

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Lot selection and technical due diligence Developer technical and legal teams; engage RFC / KOREM for clarifications 1–6 weeks
Arrange bid security and pre‑qualification pack Developer, issuing bank, legal counsel 2–4 weeks
Bid submission and electronic auction participation Developer bidding team (RFC platform) Auction date + same day to 3 days for confirmation
Post‑award qualification and PPA signature Developer, single buyer / RFC, counsel 2–6 weeks to contract signature
Financing close, EPC contracting and permits Developer, lenders, EPC contractor, local authorities 6–18+ months to COD

Durations are indicative. Always verify against the specific auction notice and RFC platform materials.

Renewable Auction Documents Needed for the 2026 Bid

The table below lists the principal documents that developers must prepare. Treat it as a working checklist: gather every item before the pre‑qualification deadline stated in the auction notice.

Document Notes
Bid submission form RFC / auction organiser template, completed and signed by the authorised signatory.
Bid security (bank guarantee or cash deposit) Issued by an approved bank in RFC‑prescribed format, or cash deposited to RFC. Amount stated in the auction notice. Verify acceptable bank list and guarantee wording on the RFC financial support page.
Certificate of incorporation and company register extract Certified copy from home‑jurisdiction registrar. Foreign entities must include local subsidiary documents. Translations required if not in Kazakh, Russian or English.
Power of attorney Board resolution authorising the signatory; notarised and apostilled if foreign.
Audited financial statements (2–3 years) Issued by an independent auditor. Certified translations required for foreign entities. Lenders will require a full financial model at the financing stage.
Technical proposal and site plan Developer / EPC technical package showing grid connection point, meter point, equipment specifications and compliance with RFC schedule requirements.
Land title or right to use Land Code‑compliant title or lease agreement. For open‑lot auctions, include the bidder’s own land title evidence.
Environmental permits or initial environmental assessment Issued by the competent environmental authority. If pending, include evidence of the application and expected timeline.
Grid connection letter or grid specification Issued by the grid operator or distribution company. Must confirm the connection point and any required network reinforcements.
Letter of intent from EPC contractor / manufacturer Optional but strongly recommended, strengthens pre‑qualification and assists lender due diligence.
KYC / ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) declarations As per RFC and anti‑money‑laundering rules. Notarised copies of UBO identification documents.
PPA template acknowledgement / comment matrix Post‑award: signed acceptance of the PPA template or schedule of requested commercial deviations.
Insurance plan Post‑award: outline of proposed construction and O&M insurance coverage, required for bankability.

A downloadable PDF version of this bid documents checklist will be published as a companion resource.

Auction Timeline 2026 and Key Deadlines

The table below maps the typical milestone sequence for the 2026 auction cycle. Exact dates and deadlines are published in each lot’s auction notice, the figures here reflect the standard procedural windows observed across recent RFC auction rounds and the published April–May 2026 schedule.

Milestone Typical Deadline / Timing Who Is Responsible
Auction notice published 4–8 weeks before auction date Auction organiser (RFC / KOREM)
Bid security and pre‑qualification documents due 1–2 weeks before auction date (per auction notice) Bidders
Auction date(s) Published schedule: 27 April – 18 May 2026 RFC / auction organiser; bidder must be ready at listed start time
Award announcement Same day or within 1–3 business days Auction organiser
PPA signature window Typically 2–6 weeks after award (notice‑dependent) Single buyer / awarded bidder
Performance security and project mobilisation Per PPA terms, often within 30–90 days of PPA execution Awarded bidder

Developers targeting a specific lot should work backwards from the auction date published on the Kazakh Invest auction calendar to build a preparation timeline, adding buffer for bank guarantee issuance (the single longest lead‑time item for most bidders).

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

The cost structure for participating in Kazakhstan’s renewable‑energy auctions includes both auction‑specific fees and broader project development costs. The table below summarises the principal items. Monetary values are lot‑specific, always verify against the auction notice and the RFC platform before finalising budgets.

Item Typical Amount / Range Notes
Bid security (bid bond or deposit) Varies by lot (stated in KZT in auction notice) RFC accepts bank guarantees or cash deposits. Confirm exact amount and acceptable format on the RFC financial support page.
Performance security (post‑award) Typically 5–20 % of total contract value Defined in the PPA; format and amount may be negotiable for bankable projects. Lenders will require a specific guarantee structure.
PPA administration / registration fee Small fixed fee (KZT) As per PPA / RFC rules; verify with the single buyer.
Grid connection and reinforcement costs Can range from hundreds of thousands to millions of USD Developer‑funded; requires a grid study and formal connection agreement. Cost allocation follows the applicable grid code and PPA terms.
Licence and permit fees Minor to moderate (varies by region) Environmental, construction permit and land lease fees set by local authorities.
Corporate taxes and VAT Depends on applicable tax regime and exemptions Consult local tax counsel. Sponsors working with multilateral lenders may seek tax stability assurances.

Important: do not finalise bid budgets based on general ranges alone. Every fee and security amount must be confirmed against the specific auction notice and RFC template for the lot in question.

What Changes in 2026: Minister of Energy Order No. 152‑n/k

On 14 April 2026, the Minister of Energy issued Order No. 152‑n/k, introducing amendments to the rules governing auction eligibility and post‑award contracting. The likely practical effects for developers participating in the 2026 auction cycle include the following:

  • Expanded open‑lot format. The order formalises the ability of bidders to propose their own land plots in additional auction lots. Developers using the open format must submit Land Code‑compliant title or lease documentation at the pre‑qualification stage.
  • Updated qualifying documentation. Early indications suggest that the order adjusts certain requirements for technical statements and financial evidence, potentially including new guarantees or declarations that must accompany the bid pack.
  • PPA clause modifications. Industry observers expect changes to specific PPA template clauses, particularly concerning performance security deadlines and commissioning milestones, that affect bankability and lender comfort.

Developers should obtain and review the full text of Order No. 152‑n/k from the official gazette (published on the Ministry of Energy website or via the Adilet legal database). All statements in this article regarding the 2026 rule changes are based on initial reporting and should be verified against the operative text of the order before bid submission.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Non‑compliant bid security wording. Bank guarantees that deviate from the RFC‑prescribed format, even in minor drafting details, can result in immediate disqualification. Mitigation: obtain the RFC template wording from the financial support page and ensure the issuing bank reproduces it exactly.
  • Missing or incomplete land title evidence. Bidders in open‑lot auctions frequently fail to present a Land Code‑compliant title or lease. Mitigation: commission a title review by Kazakh counsel well before the pre‑qualification deadline.
  • Insufficient grid connection evidence. Submitting a bid without a grid operator letter or preliminary connection study exposes the bidder to disqualification or post‑award delays. Mitigation: engage the regional grid operator at the lot‑selection stage and budget time for the grid study.
  • Poor timeline planning for permits. Construction permits, environmental approvals and land‑use registrations each carry their own processing periods. Under‑estimating these timelines jeopardises PPA commissioning deadlines. Mitigation: map the full permitting critical path at the due‑diligence stage and build buffer into the project schedule.
  • PPA deviations that lenders will not accept. Signing a PPA with non‑bankable risk allocations, or failing to negotiate key lender protections, creates financing deadlock. Mitigation: involve project finance counsel before PPA negotiation and circulate the PPA template to prospective lenders early.
  • Late appointment of local counsel. Engaging legal advisors after pre‑qualification has begun leaves insufficient time for document review, translations and apostilles. Mitigation: appoint experienced Kazakh energy counsel at the lot‑selection stage.

Conclusion

Knowing how to participate in renewable energy auctions Kazakhstan 2026 is the first step; executing a compliant, bankable bid requires methodical preparation across legal, technical and financial workstreams. The 2026 auction cycle, running from 27 April to 18 May 2026, offers material capacity across wind and solar lots, and the introduction of Order No. 152‑n/k means developers must verify updated eligibility and contracting requirements before submission. Use the step‑by‑step procedure, document checklist and timeline table in this guide as a working framework, and always cross‑check every deadline, fee and documentary requirement against the specific auction notice published on the RFC platform.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. QazaqGreen, Reporting on auction dates and lots (April–May 2026)
  2. RFC, Settlements & Financial Center: Auctions (materials page)
  3. RFC, Financial support of the application (bid security)
  4. GOV.KZ, Government press release on 2026 auction programme
  5. Adilet, Rules and procedures for renewable‑energy auctions
  6. Kazakh Invest, Auction calendar and announcements
  7. AIFC, Renewables sector report
  8. ICLG, Renewable Energy Laws and Regulations: Kazakhstan
  9. ScienceDirect, Academic analysis of Kazakhstan auction design

FAQs

How do I participate in Kazakhstan's renewable‑energy auction?
Select an auction lot from the RFC platform, confirm your eligibility, assemble the required documents (including bid security), submit your bid package before the deadline and participate in the electronic auction on the scheduled date. If you win, sign the PPA with the single buyer and mobilise the project. The full step‑by‑step procedure is set out in the numbered steps above.
Key documents include the bid submission form, bid security (bank guarantee or cash deposit), certificate of incorporation, power of attorney, audited financial statements, technical proposal, land title evidence, environmental permits, a grid connection letter and KYC/UBO declarations. See the detailed documents table above for the complete checklist.
Yes. Foreign developers may bid either through a locally incorporated subsidiary (TOO or AO) or via a joint venture with a Kazakh partner. Foreign corporate documents must be notarised, apostilled and translated into Kazakh or Russian. There are no blanket foreign ownership restrictions on auction participation.
Auction notices are published four to eight weeks before the auction date. Pre‑qualification documents and bid security are typically due one to two weeks before the auction. Award announcements follow within one to three business days, and PPA signature usually occurs within two to six weeks after the award. See the timeline table above for the complete sequence.
The RFC accepts bank guarantees in the prescribed template format and cash deposits. The exact bid security amount is stated in the auction notice for each lot. Developers should consult the RFC financial support page for the current list of acceptable instruments and guarantee wording requirements.
Engage experienced Kazakh energy counsel no later than the lot‑selection stage, before pre‑qualification begins. Legal advisors are critical for document preparation, bid security review, land title verification and PPA negotiation. If the project will be financed on a limited‑recourse basis, involve a project finance advisor at the same stage so that bankability issues are identified before the PPA is signed.
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How to Participate in Kazakhstan's 2026 Renewable‑energy Auctions: Step‑by‑step Guide for Developers

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