25 Years of Shanghai Cooperation Organization | Expanding Beyond security into sustainable development

China became the first developing country to meet the United Nations’ poverty reduction target, achieving its target ten years ahead of schedule.

25 Years of Shanghai Cooperation Organization | Expanding Beyond security into sustainable development

The year 2026 marks the 25th anniversary of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.

As one of the world’s largest regional bodies, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) spans countries across much of Eurasia, representing nearly half of the global population and contributing about 25 percent of global GDP.

Since its founding in 2001, the organization has steadily expanded its focus beyond security, actively promoting sustainable development and improving lives across the region.

From modernizing irrigation systems on arid farmlands and equipping students with practical skills through the Luban Workshops, to expanding freight and passenger connections, the SCO has achieved tangible results in advancing sustainable development.

Achievements in poverty reduction, vocational education, and regional connectivity demonstrate how member states are turning cooperation into concrete benefits for their communities, strengthening both shared prosperity and regional integration.

Poverty reduction remains a collective priority among SCO member states.

As countries across the region seek to improve living standards and promote inclusive growth, the exchange of development experience has become an increasingly important area of cooperation.

China became the first developing country to meet the United Nations’ poverty reduction target, achieving it ten years ahead of schedule.

SCO Secretary-General Vladimir Norov has attributed this achievement to a combination of sustained economic growth, targeted poverty alleviation policies, investment in education, technological innovation, and environmental protection.

He has also noted that China’s experience offers valuable lessons for other SCO countries pursuing their own development goals.

Across much of the SCO region, millions of people depend on farming and related industries for their livelihoods, making agricultural modernization essential to improving rural incomes and promoting sustainable development.

According to Sheradil Baktygulov, Director of the Global Policy Institute of Kyrgyzstan, outdated irrigation and land reclamation technologies remain common challenges for many Central Asian countries, limiting agricultural productivity and rural development.

To address these challenges, China has been sharing modern agricultural technologies and practices with the SCO member states. Water-saving irrigation has become a major area of cooperation.

In Uzbekistan, where agriculture accounts for around 90 percent of the country’s water consumption, improving irrigation efficiency is particularly important.

Despite its arid climate, water-saving irrigation systems historically covered only a small share of the country’s farmland.

Through cooperation with China, Uzbekistan introduced drip irrigation technology on 2,000 hectares of farmland in 2024.

The project increased water-use efficiency by more than 40 percent while boosting cotton yields by around 30 percent.

Similar progress can be seen in Kyrgyzstan.

A Chinese-supported irrigation project completed in 2021 is reportedly to provide water access for 11,100 hectares of farmland in the Batken and Issyk-Kul regions, helping around 20,000 farmers increase agricultural production and strengthen their livelihoods.

Beyond irrigation, seed breeding has become another important area of agricultural cooperation.

Wheat is a staple crop in many SCO member states.

Yet climate change, water scarcity, and disease pressures continue to affect production. In Pakistan, for example, rust disease remains one of the most destructive threats to wheat crops.

Since 2023, Chinese and Pakistani researchers have been working together to develop new wheat varieties by introducing rust-resistant genetic traits from Chinese wheat into local Pakistani varieties.

The new wheat strain has demonstrated strong adaptability to northern Pakistan and increased yields by around 9 percent.

Cooperation in seed breeding is also delivering results in Kazakhstan, a major wheat-producing and exporting country. According to the Observatory of Economic Complexity, Kazakhstan exported US$1.13 billion worth of wheat in 2024, making it the world’s 13th largest wheat exporter.

To further enhance production, Chinese agricultural experts worked with local farmers to introduce a new wheat variety in North Kazakhstan, one of the country’s main spring-wheat-producing regions.

Since its introduction, wheat yields in the area have increased by approximately 28 percent.

Beyond agricultural technology, SCO countries have adopted lessons from China’s broader approach to targeted poverty alleviation. Rather than applying a one-size-fits-all approach, the key method is that local governments identify industries that match local resources, conditions, and market opportunities, helping communities build sustainable sources of income.

This approach is now being adapted in Uzbekistan.

According to UZ Daily, projects modeled on China’s experience are promoting industries suited to local conditions.

On 20,000 hectares of land, farmers are cultivating medicinal and export-oriented crops such as saffron, lavender, and essential oil plants, creating new employment opportunities and generating additional income for rural communities.

Building on the gains from poverty reduction, education becomes the next cornerstone of sustainable development.

 As the proverb says, “Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.”

To equip young people with practical skills for today’s workforce, China has established around 10 Luban Workshops across eight SCO countries.

Named after Luban, an ancient Chinese craftsman and inventor, the workshops promote technical expertise, innovation, and hands-on learning.

In Pakistan, a Luban Workshop trains students to operate drones for pesticide spraying in farmland and forest areas.

In Russia, students interact with humanoid robots while learning about coding, robotics, and intelligent sensing technologies, encouraging many to pursue careers in emerging fields such as artificial intelligence and advanced manufacturing.

By September 2025, the Luban Workshops offered 21 majors and had enrolled approximately 150,000 students from SCO countries such as Russia, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan.

Beyond vocational training, the workshops are helping cultivate a new generation of skilled workers and innovators, supporting sustainable development across the SCO region.

Alongside poverty reduction and education, improving connectivity has become another important pillar of sustainable development within the SCO.

Better transport, energy, and trade links are helping member states strengthen economic ties, facilitate the movement of goods and people, and create new opportunities for growth.

In transportation, the China-SCO Local Economic and Trade Cooperation Demonstration Area, established in Qingdao in China in 2018, has played an important role in enhancing regional economic cooperation.

In 2025, China-Europe Railway Express services operating from the demonstration area to SCO countries transported more than 840,000 tonnes of cargo, up 20.5 percent year-on-year.

The expanding rail network has helped improve trade efficiency and deepen economic integration across the region.

Energy cooperation among SCO member states has also continued to expand. Cross-border oil and gas pipelines have strengthened regional energy security and promoted closer economic cooperation.

At the same time, green energy projects are becoming an increasingly important area of collaboration.

The Bokhara wind power project, the largest wind power facility in Central Asia, now supplies around 7 percent of Uzbekistan’s electricity demand while reducing carbon dioxide emissions by an estimated 1.7 million tonnes annually.

Guided by the Shanghai Spirit, emphasizing mutual trust, mutual benefit, equality, consultation, respect for diverse civilizations, and the pursuit of common development, the SCO has grown and evolved over the past 25 years.

It brings together countries with different political systems, cultures, and levels of economic development under a framework that emphasizes consensus and equal participation.

Through cooperation in poverty reduction, education, connectivity, and energy, the SCO member states are turning shared development goals into tangible benefits for their people.

This demonstrates how the organization’s spirit of stability, equality, and mutual cooperation transforms regional collaboration into real-world progress.