Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 26 – Articles last week suggesting that Russia’s Kerch Straits bridge
might be at risk because it is rapidly settling on a soft seabed have called
attention to a larger problem: the state of Russia’s bridges more generally.
Russian experts say approximately 100 have collapsed in the last year alone and
that more will soon unless urgent measures are taken.
The
major reason for this problem, Nurlan Gasymov of the URA news agency says, is
serious underfunding of regional programs to repair and rebuild the country’s
aging infrastructure. Many have not been
fixed for more than 30 years, and their collapse is costing lives and
undermining the country’s transportation network (ura.news/articles/1036276896).
The situation is now so dire, the Siberian
journalist says, that it sometimes happens that several bridges collapse in the
course of a single day. On October 9, for example, that occurred, with two
bridges collapsing onto the Trans-Siberian railway in Amur Oblast and a third
falling down in Mordvinia.
Mikhail Blinkin, a transportation
economist at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics, says that “an enormous number
of bridges are in a dangerous situation” because they aren’t being maintained.
Those in the worst shape are bridges under the responsibility of regional or
local officials. “There is no money” to
do even minimal repairs, he adds.
Worse this underfinancing of bridge
repair has been true for decades, extending back into Soviet times. Now, the
bill for this failure to maintain the bridges is coming do; and it is far
higher than any official had anticipated, in large measure because Russia has
so many rivers and thus so many bridges.
According to Rosstat, there are abut
42,000 bridges in Russia, with a total length of 2.1 million meters. “Every
ninth bridge is made of word,” and “about 500” are acknowledged to be at the point
of collapse. Many were built when the
weight of trucks they had to support was half as much as the weight now.
Aleksandr Strelnikov, a specialist
at the Russian transportation ministry, says that many of the bridges were
constructed inadequately and thus were going to fail regardless of
maintenance. Still worse, he continues,
the quality of bridge construction has declined in recent years: it was far
superior in Soviet times. Now, officials try to build bridges too quickly.
The problem is made worse by Russia’s
severe climatic conditions, but it has been hidden from many because the worst
cases are in poor regions distant from the capital. Many of the bridge
collapses now are not even reported in the central media, and so Russians do
not know just how bad things are becoming beyond the areas in which they live.
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