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Ekıbastūz

Ekıbastūz

FieldValue
official_nameEkibastūz
native_nameЕкібастұз
image_skylineФотография Экибастуза.png
image_altA photo of housing and apartments blocks in Ekibastuz
image_captionEkıbastūz in July 2023
image_sealEkibastuz_seal.png
pushpin_mapKazakhstan
pushpin_label_positionbottom
pushpin_mapsize280
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Kazakhstan
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_nameKazakhstan
subdivision_name1Pavlodar Region
subdivision_type2City administration
subdivision_name2Ekibastuz City Administration
established_titleFounded
established_date1948
established_title1Incorporated (city)
established_date11957
leader_titleAkim (mayor)
leader_nameBeisekin Ayan Uakhitovich
population_as_of2013
population_total146991
timezoneTime in Kazakhstan
utc_offset+5
coordinates
elevation_m347
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code141200
area_code+7 7187
blank_nameClimate
blank_infoDfb
websitehttp://ekibastuz.gov.kz/

Ekıbastūz ( ; ) is a city in Pavlodar Region, northeastern Kazakhstan. It is the administrative center of the Ekibastuz City Administration. The population was Ekıbastūz is served by Ekıbastūz Airport.

History

The history of Ekıbastūz begins in the 19th century, when Kosym Pshembayev, a native Kazakh who was commissioned by Russian merchants to look for mineral resources in that region, alighted on a coal field southeast of Pavlodar. The commercial exploitation of the field started soon after. The field afterwards was sold to a British businessman, Leslie Urquhart. The village of Ekıbastūz was established in 1899, named after the nearby lake of the same name, which means 2 heads of salt in Kazakh (eki 'two' + bas 'head' + tuz 'salt').

The revolution in the Russian Empire, as well as two World Wars, distracted the attention of the state from the exploitation of the field. The village was totally deserted. However, in 1948 the first team (only 50 people) started construction of the future town. The borders of the future open-cast coal fields were also marked at that time.

December 1954 was a significant period for Ekıbastūz, because the first train loads of coal were loaded. From that time the industrial development of Ekıbastūz started. In 1955 the millionth ton of the coal was produced. In the summer of 1958, Georgy Malenkov and his wife were exiled to Ekıbastūz, where they were kept under close surveillance.

The status of the "town" was given to Ekıbastūz on July 12, 1957 by a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic. At that time the population of Ekıbastūz was approximately 25,000 people. Nowadays, the population of Ekıbastūz is about 141,000 people.

Industry

Flue gas stacks at CHP (TPP) power station in Ekıbastūz

The Vostochny Coal Mine company is located in Ekıbastūz. Today Ekıbastūz is the biggest open-cast coal field and one of the most perspective open-cast coal regions in the world. It contains more than 13 billion tons of coal in the area of 62 square kilometers. In other words, there are 74 million tons of coal per km3.

Near Ekıbastūz there are two coal fired power plants: GRES-1, with installed capacity of 4,000 MW, and GRES-2, with an installed capacity of 1,000 MW. GRES-2 has the tallest chimney in the world (419.7 m).

The construction of GRES-2 was part of a Program for Ekıbastūz coalfield development, foreseeing to be built four thermal power plants, each one of 4,000 MW (8 units x 500 MWe). In years 1991–93 only Units No 1 and 2 were commissioned. The construction of Unit No 3 was started 1990 but later stopped.

From Ekıbastūz to Kokshetau runs an overhead power line designed for a transmission voltage of 1,150 kV, the Ekıbastūz-Kokshetau powerline.

Located in a naturally arid area, the city of Ekıbastūz and its industries are supplied with water primarily from the Irtysh River, via the Irtysh–Karaganda Canal, which passes about 10 km north of Ekıbastūz, where a number of water reservoirs are located.{{citation

Climate

|Jan record high C = 9.2 |Feb record high C = 10.8 |Mar record high C = 25.2 |Apr record high C = 32.7 |May record high C = 39.0 |Jun record high C = 40.3 |Jul record high C = 40.3 |Aug record high C = 40.9 |Sep record high C = 36.5 |Oct record high C = 31.0 |Nov record high C = 20.7 |Dec record high C = 10.0 |Jan record low C = -45.0 |Feb record low C = -40.2 |Mar record low C = -35.0 |Apr record low C = -22.8 |May record low C = -12.1 |Jun record low C = -1.1 |Jul record low C = 6.0 |Aug record low C = -2.4 |Sep record low C = -6.3 |Oct record low C = -24.7 |Nov record low C = -36.0 |Dec record low C = -41.0 | access-date = November 18, 2023}}

Gulag

It was the location of a major labor camp of the Gulag system maintained by the Soviet Union from the 1920s to the 1950s. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn served in this camp and it is now the Shakhtyor Stadium (Ekibastuz) soccer stadium.

References

References

  1. (2022-08-16). "Аян Бейсекин назначен акимом Экибастуза".
  2. "Ekıbastūz travel Тут Камила живет guide".
  3. E.M. Pospelov, ''Geograficheskie nazvaniya mira'' (Moscow, 1998), p. 479.
  4. William Taubman, ''Khrushchev''
  5. "Diagrams - SkyscraperPage.com".
  6. "Fifty Years After 'Denisovich,' Traveling Back To Solzhenitsyn's Gulag".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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