President Shavkat Mirziyoyev of Uzbekistan sent a congratulatory message to workers in the housing and communal services sector, who will celebrate their professional holiday on April 18. The head of state expressed sincere gratitude to the multinational teams in the industry for their dedicated labor and summarized the outcomes of a large-scale transformation of the system implemented in recent years.
In his address, the president emphasized that over the past nine years, the state has allocated 3.7 trillion soms for the repair of approximately 51,000 apartment buildings. These efforts have fundamentally changed the housing management model: today, over 90% of houses in the country are serviced by private management companies, whose operations are becoming increasingly transparent. This has been largely facilitated by accelerated digitalization—specifically, the implementation of the "Mening uyim" billing system, which already has over 1.5 million homeowners registered.
Significant progress has also been noted in infrastructure matters. Thanks to the construction of thousands of facilities and the laying of tens of thousands of kilometers of networks, the level of centralized drinking water supply to the population has increased from 63% in 2017 to the current 83%. Similar work is being carried out in the heating supply system, where modernization has covered hundreds of boiler houses and over a thousand kilometers of heating networks.
Speaking about the future, the head of state outlined ambitious goals until 2030. The authorities plan to increase the coverage of clean drinking water to 90% and significantly expand the centralized heating supply system, raising its share from 37% to 58%. To implement these tasks, 13 major investment projects based on public-private partnerships are planned.
Concluding the congratulations, the president assured that issues of strengthening the material and technical base of the housing and communal services sector and stimulating the labor of specialists in the utility sphere will continue to be under special state control.
Source: podrobno.uz