News

SIA Fluxy One (Fluxy.one) and Trade House Export are establishing a digital hub in Tashkent for digital and compliance support for exports to the EU.

Fluxy.One expands to Central Asia: An official representative office is now open in Tashkent in partnership with Trade House Export. This strategic alliance automates EU market access for Uzbek manufacturers, ensuring seamless DPP (Digital Product Passport) and ESPR compliance for textiles, metallurgy, and electronics exports.

Official signing ceremony of Fluxy.One and Trade House Export partnership at the Embassy of Uzbekistan in Latvia for DPP implementation.

RIGA, Latvia — European Digital Product Passport (DPP) operator Fluxy.One (Solution Partner of GS1 Belgium-Luxembourg) has announced the opening of an official representative office in Uzbekistan. The office is being launched in partnership with OOO Trade House Export.

The agreement was signed at the Embassy of Uzbekistan in Latvia in the presence of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Timur Rakhmanov. The document was signed by Fluxy.One Co-Founder and CEO Nadezhda Barodzich and Trade House Export Director Vladimir Galperin.

This partnership creates the infrastructure to automate exports from Central Asia to Europe. Ahead of the entry into force of the ESPR (Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation), possessing a Digital Product Passport (DPP) is becoming an "entry ticket" to the EU market. The alliance between Fluxy.One and Trade House Export will ensure compliance of Uzbek products (textiles, metallurgy, electronics, construction materials) with the new rigorous transparency standards.

Strategic Highlights:

  • EU Compliance: Ensuring the competitiveness of Uzbek products (textiles, steel and iron, agricultural products, etc.) in the EU market through early adoption of ESPR standards.
  • Latvian Innovation: Showcasing Latvia's capability to export high-quality GovTech and LegalTech solutions.
  • Digital Transformation: Supporting the "Digital Uzbekistan 2030" strategy by digitizing export workflows.

Vladimir Galperin, Director of LLC Trade House Export: 

"As EU requirements tighten, Uzbekistan is forming a digital export infrastructure focused on long-term market access. The partnership with Fluxy.One is a practical step towards adapting Uzbek exports to this new reality. implementing digital passports creates a unified quality standard for our key sectors: from metallurgy and textiles to electronics and construction materials."

Nadezhda Barodzich, CEO and Co-Founder of Fluxy.One: 

"The ESPR regulation is rewriting the rules of global trade. Our goal is to ensure that compliance becomes an accessible advantage, not a burden. Together with Trade House Export, we provide Central Asian manufacturers with an Enterprise-level tool — automated, compliant with GS1 standards and European Commission requirements."

The company also confirmed plans to scale this partnership model to support supply chains from India, Bangladesh, the USA, and Japan.

ZeroBox:

An Answer to European SME Pain Points Simultaneously with its expansion into Asia, Fluxy.One announces the launch of a unique product for the EU internal market — ZeroBox. While large exporters require complex Enterprise solutions, Europe's small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are often paralyzed by the complexity of DPP requirements.

"ZeroBox is an 'anti-bureaucratic' solution. It is a Digital Business Card concept for your product," explains Nadezhda Barodzich. "You start for free, receive one perpetual QR code, and a basic digital identity. It is a digital container, but immediately compliant with GS1 standards. No unnecessary costs at the start. You populate the product’s digital passport with data and expand it only when the regulator requires it. ZeroBox allows businesses to grow with the requirements, not drown in them."

ZeroBox by Fluxy.One: The "anti-bureaucratic" solution for European SMEs. Start your digital product identity for free and scale as regulations grow.

About the Companies:

SIA Fluxy One (Riga, Latvia) is an international technology company providing neutral technical infrastructure and automated solutions for regulatory compliance and legal matters using AI for Digital Product Passports (DPP) in accordance with the EU ESPR and GPSR regulations. The company operates as an L1–L3 infrastructure provider within the DPP ecosystem, delivering technical solutions, access interfaces, and automated compliance support, while legal liability for DPP data remains with the economic operator as defined in the ESPR.

Fluxy.One is a Solution Partner of GS1 Belgium & Luxembourg and implements DPP solutions based on the GS1 Digital Link standard, including its own resolver infrastructure. The company's product portfolio includes Fluxy.One, a full-featured DPP solution for manufacturers, exporters, and enterprises, and ZeroBox, a zero-friction product designed for micro and small European businesses. Headquartered in Riga, Latvia, the company has operational units in the European Union, USA, UK, and Central Asia (Uzbekistan). The company operates globally.

OOO Trade House Export (Tashkent, Uzbekistan) is a company specializing in developing Uzbekistan's export potential and implementing international trade standards for local manufacturers. Uzbekistan's exports in 2025 are estimated at over USD 30–33 billion. While the share of supplies to the European Union remains comparatively moderate, it demonstrates steady growth amidst the diversification of trade flows beyond the CIS and strengthening product quality requirements. The export basket is still based on commodities and food products; however, supplies of textile and garment products have noticeably increased in recent years, with European retailers already viewing Uzbekistan as an alternative source for sustainable supply chains. Exports of finished goods with higher added value are also developing. In parallel, a new export cluster in electronics, electrical engineering, and related components is forming, oriented towards integration into EU production chains, creating significant growth potential provided European requirements for quality, sustainability, and product traceability are met.

Uzbekistan's exports in 2025 are estimated at more than US$30-33 billion, with the share of supplies to the European Union remaining relatively modest but showing steady growth amid the diversification of trade flows beyond the CIS and stricter product quality requirements. The export basket continues to be dominated by raw materials and foodstuffs, but in recent years there has been a notice able increase in shipments of textiles and clothing, with Uzbekistan already being considered by European retailers as an alternative source of sustainable supply chains, as well as the development of exports of finished products with higher added value. At the same time, a new export cluster is being formed in the field of electronics, electrical engineering, and related components, focused on integration into EU production chains, which creates significant growth potential, provided that European requirements for product quality, sustainability, and traceability are met.

Are you located in Central Asia and planning to export to the European Union?
Contact our official representative office in Tashkent for a free consultation on Digital Product Passports (DPP) and ESPR regulations.

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