Classification
Product TypeProcessed Food
Product FormPackaged (semi-solid fat spread)
Industry PositionProcessed edible fat product
Market
Margarine in the Kyrgyz Republic is an import-dependent packaged fat spread and industrial baking ingredient, with supply dominated by regional trade partners. UN Comtrade data (via WITS) for HS 151710 shows the Russian Federation and Kazakhstan as the leading suppliers to Kyrgyzstan in 2023. Market access and on-shelf compliance are anchored in EAEU technical regulations covering oil-and-fat products (TR TS 024/2011), food safety (TR TS 021/2011), food labeling (TR TS 022/2011), and permitted use of additives/flavorings/processing aids (TR TS 029/2012). The main deal-breaker for shipments is regulatory and documentation non-conformance (e.g., missing/invalid EAEU declaration of conformity or non-compliant labeling) at customs clearance.
Market RoleNet importer (import-dependent consumer and bakery market)
Domestic RoleHousehold spread and bakery/confectionery ingredient market supplied primarily by imports
Specification
Compositional Metrics- Compliance expectations are anchored in EAEU requirements for food safety (TR TS 021/2011), fat-and-oil products (TR TS 024/2011), and permitted additives/flavorings/processing aids (TR TS 029/2012).
Supply Chain
Value Chain- Import (EAEU partners and limited third-country supply) → importer/wholesaler → retail and B2B distribution (bakery/foodservice/food manufacturing) → consumers
Freight IntensityMedium
Transport ModeLand
Risks
Regulatory Compliance HighNon-compliance with EAEU technical regulations applicable in Kyrgyzstan (notably TR TS 024/2011 for oil-and-fat products and TR TS 022/2011 for labeling) or missing/invalid conformity documentation can block customs clearance or lead to withdrawal from circulation.Lock the correct HS/CN FEA classification early, validate EAEU declaration of conformity coverage with the importer, and run a pre-shipment label and document checklist against TR TS 022/2011 requirements.
Supply Concentration MediumImport sourcing for Kyrgyzstan’s margarine (HS 151710) is regionally concentrated; disruptions affecting key suppliers (e.g., Russian Federation or Kazakhstan) can quickly tighten availability and raise prices in the Kyrgyz market.Qualify at least one alternative supplier origin and keep optionality for packaging formats and specifications that are common across suppliers.
Logistics MediumAs a landlocked market, Kyrgyzstan is exposed to land-transport volatility (fuel prices, border congestion, route disruptions), which can increase delivered cost and raise the risk of delay for time-sensitive distribution.Use route contingency planning, add delivery-time buffers in contracts, and align packaging/palletization to reduce handling damage and relabeling risks at border or warehouses.
FAQ
Which EAEU technical regulations are most relevant for selling imported margarine in Kyrgyzstan?Margarine sold in Kyrgyzstan is typically covered by EAEU rules for oil-and-fat products (TR TS 024/2011) and general food safety (TR TS 021/2011). Pack labeling is governed by TR TS 022/2011, and any use of food additives/flavorings/processing aids is regulated under TR TS 029/2012 alongside the general food-safety regulation.
Which countries are the main external suppliers of margarine to Kyrgyzstan?UN Comtrade data via the World Bank’s WITS portal for HS 151710 shows the Russian Federation and Kazakhstan as the largest suppliers to Kyrgyzstan in 2023, with smaller imports from Uzbekistan, China and other origins.
What is the key document risk that can block customs clearance for margarine shipments into Kyrgyzstan?A common deal-breaker is missing or invalid conformity documentation for products covered under the EAEU oil-and-fat technical regulation framework (TR TS 024/2011), since the EEC maintains product lists used for customs administration where a declaration of conformity is expected for specified codes.