Enterprise Singapore — one of the world’s most established government agencies for enterprise development — has spent decades refining how companies grow internationally: trade missions, B2B matchmaking, industry-specific programmes, structured export support.
The Enterprise Uzbekistan team met with Enterprise Singapore to exchange experience on business support, export development, and innovation. The conversation covered Enterprise Singapore’s instruments for accompanying companies at various stages of growth and identified areas of practical alignment between the two organisations — including potential joint formats for business missions and B2B engagement.
For global cloud providers, the question of where data lives is rarely just technical. It is legal, regulatory, and reputational. Alibaba Cloud’s meeting with Enterprise Uzbekistan focused precisely on this: data residency requirements, cross-border data flows, and what a coherent legal framework for international technology companies actually needs to look like in practice.
Enterprise Uzbekistan’s answer to that question — a jurisdiction operating under a legal framework based on elements of English and Welsh law, to the extent not contradicting the Constitution of Uzbekistan, with a legal stability regime running until 2100 — is designed to be legible to exactly the kind of operator Alibaba Cloud represents. The conversation confirmed that the framework is being read correctly by the companies it was built for.
Tencent Cloud’s regional footprint spans cloud services, AI infrastructure, and one of the world’s largest game development ecosystems. The meeting explored what cooperation could look like across all three — and added a fourth dimension: Singapore as a platform for Uzbek companies looking to enter ASEAN markets.
For a tech company based in Uzbekistan, the ASEAN market is large, proximate in terms of digital maturity, and difficult to enter without the right infrastructure and local relationships. A partnership model anchored in Tencent Cloud’s regional network would open that door directly.
The meeting with Singapore’s venture community focused on market access programmes, mentorship formats, B2B introductions, and participation in SWITCH — one of Asia’s largest startup and tech conferences. Singapore has spent years building the infrastructure that connects founders to global investors. The conversation explored how Uzbek startups can access that infrastructure directly.
Every conversation about entering a new jurisdiction eventually reaches the same point: a lawyer reads the documents. JWS Law Firm — a Singapore practice experienced in cross-border commercial frameworks — reviewed the legal architecture of Enterprise Uzbekistan in detail: the common law foundation, the separate judicial and arbitration infrastructure, the protections available to international investors and companies.
The discussion confirmed Enterprise Uzbekistan’s model as well-structured and legible to practitioners experienced in common law frameworks.
Enterprise Uzbekistan — the International Digital Technology Centre (IDTC), launched on the initiative of the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan, Shavkat Mirziyoyev, and built from the ground up as a dedicated technology jurisdiction and operates under a special legal regime based on elements of English and Welsh Common Law, with its own legislation, independent regulatory framework, and a One-Stop-Shop covering everything from company registration to ongoing government services.