+86-156-2511-0166[email protected]WhatsApp
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUT
PRODUCTS
All products
APPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUTAPPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp[email protected]
Hanheng RefractoryHanheng RefractoryBuilt for heat. Proven in delivery.

Hanheng Refractory Materials Co., Ltd. supplies shaped bricks, monolithic refractories, tundish materials, and insulation products for steel, ferroalloy, glass, boiler, and other heat-intensive operations.

Quick links

  • Home
  • About
  • Products
  • Applications & Industries
  • Market Support
  • News

Core products

  • Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Magnesia-Alumina-Carbon Brick
  • Al2O3-SiC-C Brick
  • Calcium-Magnesium-Carbon Brick

Contact

Panpan Road, Zhanqian District, Yingkou, Liaoning, China[email protected]+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp

© 2026 Hanheng Refractory

Project discussionProduct system
Industry update
Published April 24, 2026cementeconomyenergy

Central Asia Introduces Clean Air Initiative at RES 2026

ASTANA – Air pollution in Central Asia remains a serious and growing challenge driven by both human activity and natural factors. Governments across the region increasingly recognize that coordinated, science-based approaches are essential to improving air quality and protecting public health.

Source-backed market reading focused on the local industrial developments, project signals, and operating consequences that are actually worth tracking.

Read Article
Previous article

ASTANA – Air pollution in Central Asia remains a serious and growing challenge driven by both human activity and natural factors. Governments across the region increasingly recognize that coordinated, science-based approaches are essential to improving air quality and protecting public health.

Building on the first High-Level Regional Policy Dialogue in 2024 in Tashkent, the second dialogue was held on April 23 as part of the Regional Ecological Summit (RES) 2026. Ministers, international organizations, and development partners gathered to advance a shared clean air agenda.

Air pollution remains one of the leading environmental health risks globally, contributing to around 65,000 premature deaths annually in Central Asia and $20 billion in economic losses. Inger Andersen, United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Program, noted that 99% of the global population breathes air that does not meet WHO standards, adding that Central Asia continues to lag behind desired air quality levels.

She linked the problem to urbanization, industrial activity, and climate-related pressures such as dust and sand storms. A key focus was shifting from dialogue to implementation. The Clean Air Initiative for Central Asia was presented as a framework for aligning national and regional efforts.

Uzbekistan outlined ongoing measures, including relocation of polluting industries outside urban areas, expansion of green zones, and investments in waste management and waste-to-energy projects. The country also emphasized stronger air quality monitoring and analytical systems.

A proposed Uzbekistan-Kazakhstan consortium was highlighted as a starting point for broader regional cooperation, with emphasis on shared data, coordinated policies, and joint urban projects. Speakers underlined the inherently transboundary nature of air pollution.

Emissions cross borders freely, making regional cooperation essential. Central Asia was identified as one of the least covered regions in global emissions monitoring frameworks, particularly for methane. Andersen stressed that “one country’s breath out is another country’s breath in,” underscoring the need for coordinated action.

She also called for stronger participation of national oil companies in global methane monitoring and reporting systems. Financing was identified as a fundamental prerequisite. Valerie Hickey, Director for Environment at the World Bank Group, noted that clean air policies are closely tied to economic modernization, competitiveness, and the adoption of green technology.

The World Bank has committed over $1 billion to environmental and infrastructure projects in Central Asia, supporting broader ambitions for transition toward high-income economies. Countries highlighted national reforms aimed at reducing emissions and modernizing infrastructure.

Kazakh Minister of Ecology and Natural Resources Yerlan Nyssanbayev presented the country’s initiatives, including industrial upgrades, gasification, and large-scale afforestation.

Next article

Sources and reading line

Official releases and public references behind the argument in this article.

Evidence line
Published source

Central Asia Introduces Clean Air Initiative at RES 2026

Source: Astana Times RSS

Open source↗
Support note

Central Asia Introduces Clean Air Initiative at RES 2026

Published source

Document: Astana Times RSS · Source: Astana Times RSS

Continue from here

Continue this article into market review, product systems, and project preparation.

When this signal is already affecting your buying sequence, continue from here into the related market page, product route, or a practical project discussion.

Related market pages

Continue into the country page when destination documents, packing, and delivery timing need a deeper read.

Kazakhstan industry and refractory demandOpen market page
Related product systems

Continue into the product systems that are most likely to appear in the same procurement discussion.

Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon BrickReview productCalcium-Magnesium-Carbon BrickReview productBasic Ramming Mass for Induction Furnace Working LiningReview product
Project preparation

Share the unit, duty position, target campaign, destination market, and document questions so the next reply can stay practical.

Unit name, exact hot-zone position, and current lining route

Target campaign, shutdown or commissioning window, and expected quantity split

Destination market, delivery route, and the document set needed before quotation

Discuss this articleBack to News