Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 17 – At present, the population of the Russian Federation is declining
by approximately 400,000 a year, putting at risk not just villages but major
cities, demographers say. They suggest that “no fewer than 300” Russian cities
now face the threat of disappearing altogether, including seven especially
prominent ones.
In
an article for the Russia-7 portal, journalist Taras Repin considers each of
these in turn (russian7.ru/post/7-russkikh-gorodov-kotorye-mogut-ischezn/):
1.
Novokuznetsk. Despite having a
population now of 500,000, this Siberian city has never been attractive for
people. Its industries pollute the air and are causing health problems for all
generations. It also has one of the
highest crime rates in Russia, with 11,000 crimes a year on average in recent
times – more than ten times the number committed in the Chechen capital of
Grozny. Not surprisingly, those who can
leave do.
2.
Artyom. Since 2000 when the last mine closed near
this city in the Russian Far East, the environment there has improved but the
economy has collapsed. It is a leading
center of organized crime and the drug trade.
Most of its population has or will move to nearby Vladivostok or to
European Russia. But even if they don’t, Vladivostok is likely to expand and
absorb it within a few decades.
3.
Verkhoyansk. Long known as a city of prisoners and exiles,
this city is now famed as the coldest in the world. It has only 1200 people
even now. One can reach it by road only
in the winter; air connections even from Yakutsk are expensive. This “God-forgotten place” will simply
disappear in a few years.
4.
Ivanovo. Long a center of the Russian textile
industry, this city has seen its birth rates collapse and its death rates rise
to the point that it will disappear before 2100 even if there is no
outmigration. A major reason for the falling birthrate is that men have already
left, leaving Ivanovo with one of the most gender-imbalanced populations in the
country.
5.
Artemovsk. Founded 300 years ago as a gold mining
center, Artemovsk’s gold has now run out as have its silver and copper
reserves. Over the last 50 years, its
population has declined by 80 percent and now stands at 1970.
6.
Norilsk. The second largest city in the Russian north,
Norilsk is “at the same time one of the most polluted and depressed in the
world.” Those who can leave are doing
so: over the past decade its population fell from 213,000 to 177,000. Most of those leaving are heading toward one
of the two capitals, whose real estate firms advertise massively in Norilsk.
7.
Vorkuta. This is the most
rapidly declining city in Russia, with the population having fallen from 79,000
in 2006 to 59,000 in 2016. “There is today no medical support for the
population … there are no stores … and the mines in the area are all closing,”
residents say. At the current rate of decline, Vorkuta will cease to exist
before 2050.
No comments:
Post a Comment