Kazakhstan Temir Zholy (KTZ), the state railway operator, has proposed a radical tariff restructuring that would eliminate commodity-based pricing by 2026. According to the Atameken National Chamber of Entrepreneurs, this would:
- Increase grain transport costs by 310% immediately in 2026
- Push tariffs to 420% of current levels by 2030
- Set all freight rates at petroleum-level pricing (currently the highest tariff category)
Devastating Impact on Grain Competitiveness
The proposed changes would:
- Erode Kazakhstan’s wheat export advantage – Current rail costs account for 14% of production expenses. The hike would add $15-20/ton to FOB prices, making Kazakh grain uncompetitive against Russian and EU suppliers.
- Trigger 15-20% food price inflation – While “socially important” food products are exempt, raw material transport costs will cascade through supply chains.
- Cripple domestic fertilizer production – Transport-dependent producers like KazAzot and KazPhosphate face 70-75% cost increases, potentially forcing shutdowns.
Contradictory Financial Picture
KTZ’s proposal comes despite:
- 10X profit growth since 2020 (16B to 158B tenge annually)
- Existing 250% tariff increases since 2019
- Stable financial position per company reports
Global Context and Alternatives
Unlike Kazakhstan’s plan:
- Russia maintains grain rail discounts (30-40% below standard rates)
- EU subsidizes agricultural logistics through CAP
- US/Canada use distance-based grain pricing models
Atameken proposes limiting tariff hikes to inflation rates (currently 8.4% annually) while preserving commodity differentiation.
A Threat to Food Security
This tariff restructuring risks:
✓ Collapsing Kazakhstan’s $3B grain export industry
✓ Triggering double-digit food inflation
✓ Creating fertilizer supply chain disruptions
Urgent government intervention is needed to prevent economic damage that could take decades to reverse.
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