- subject Russian Federation, is part of the Far Eastern Federal District.

Square— 788.6 thousand sq. km.
Length: From south to north for 1,800 km. From west to east - 125-750 km.

Population— 1401.9 thousand people (2009 data)
Population density – 1.8 people. per 1 sq. km.
The share of the urban population is 80.6%, rural - 19.4%.

Administrative center- Khabarovsk.

Geographical position.
Khabarovsk Territory is located in the center of the Russian Far East. The territory of the region is dominated by mountainous terrain (over 70% of the territory). About three quarters of the region's territory is occupied by mountains and plateaus with altitudes from 500 to 2500 meters. The main mountain ranges - Sikhote-Alin, Pribrezhny, Dzhugdzhur - in the east; Turana, Bureinsky, Badzhalsky, Yam-Alin - in the southwest; Yudomsky, Suntar-Khayata (with highest point Mount Beryl - 2933 m) - in the north. In the northwest is the Yudomo-Mayskoye Highlands.

The largest flat area is the heavily swampy Middle Amur Plain, located on both sides of the Amur. The most extensive lowlands are also the Lower Amur, Evoron-Tugur - in the south and central part and Okhotsk - in the north.

Land, water and air routes pass through the territory of the region, connecting the interior regions of Russia with the Pacific ports, and the CIS countries and Western Europe with the states of the Asia-Pacific region.

In addition to the main continental part, the region includes some islands, including the largest - Shantar Islands. Total length coastline- about 2,500 km, including islands - 3,390 km.
From the northeast and east the region is washed by the Sea of ​​Okhotsk, from the southeast by the Sea of ​​Japan. Sakhalin is separated from the island by the Tatarsky and Nevelskoy straits.
The territory of the region in the north is 430 km from the Arctic Circle.

Borders:
In the north - with the Magadan Region and the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia).
In the southwest - with the Jewish Autonomous Region.
In the west - with the Amur region.
In the south - with the People's Republic of China and the Primorsky Territory.

Climate.
The climate is moderate monsoon. Spring in most parts of the territory begins in early March and is characterized by long duration and temperature instability. Summer throughout almost the entire territory, with the exception of coastal-sea areas, is hot and humid, since in July - early August tropical air masses characterized by high air humidity penetrate into the southern regions of the region. At the beginning of autumn, warm, dry weather sets in. Winter is characterized by sunny, little snowy weather with severe frosts, often accompanied by winds. On the coast the frosts are somewhat milder.

Climatic conditions change when moving from north to south and also depend on proximity to the sea, the shape and nature of the relief. These changes are quite significant.
The average January temperature ranges in continental areas from -22 degrees Celsius in the south to -40 degrees Celsius in the north. On the coast - from -18 degrees Celsius to -24 degrees Celsius. The absolute minimum temperature even in the south of the region reaches -50 degrees Celsius. The average July temperature in the south is +20 degrees Celsius, in the north – +15 degrees Celsius.
The growing season (with temperatures of 5 degrees C and above) is from 170 - 177 days in the southern regions, up to 130 days in the north.

The annual precipitation ranges from 400-600 mm in the north, to 600-800 mm on the plains and eastern slopes ridges and more than 1000 mm in the mountains. In the south of the region, up to 90% of precipitation falls from April to October, with especially high precipitation in July and August.
Permafrost is widespread in the north.

Water resources.
The region is washed by the Seas of Okhotsk and Japan.
In the Khabarovsk Territory there are about 210 thousand rivers with a total length of approximately 584 thousand km. About half of the territory of the Khabarovsk Territory is drained by tributaries of the Amur, one of the largest rivers in Russia. Its total length is 4440 km, including more than 1500 km in the region. It carries a huge mass of water over the edge, pouring below the city of Nikolaevsk-on-Amur into the Sea of ​​Okhotsk on average 346 cubic meters per year. km.

The largest tributaries of the Amur within the Khabarovsk Territory are the Ussuri, Bureya, Amgun, Bikin, Goryun, Anyui, Tunguska. A vast territory in the north of the region belongs to the Lena River basin (Maya River, Uchur River and others)
Also on the territory of the region are the rivers of the Sea of ​​Japan basin - Koppi and Tumnin and the Sea of ​​Okhotsk basin - Tugur, Uda, Ulya, Urak, Okhota, Inya. The rivers of the Amur region are fed mainly by monsoon rains; The rivers flowing into the Sea of ​​Okhotsk are predominantly snow-fed and floods occur in the spring.

There are over 58 thousand lakes in the region. The following lakes are located in the Amur basin: Bolon, Chukchagirskoye, Hummi, Bolshoi Kizi, Udyl, Orel, Chlya, Evoron.

Vegetable world.
The Khabarovsk Territory has powerful natural forest potential. The area of ​​the forest fund of the region as of 01.01.2009 is 73.7 million hectares (93.6% of the territory of the region), of which forest lands account for 57.9 million hectares (78.6% of the forest fund), in including 51.3 million hectares (69.5%) of forested land.

The forests are extremely diverse in composition and include representatives of the Far Eastern (Amur), Okhotsk-Kamchatka and East Siberian floristic regions. Per 1 hectare of forested area, reserves vary from 40-70 cubic meters. meters in the light-coniferous forests of the Okhotsk coast (north of the region) to 150-160 in the cedar-broad-leaved forests in the south. Coniferous forests are predominant, occupying more than 84% of the area covered by the main forest-forming species and more than 88% of their total stock: in the north, northwest and east, light coniferous forests of Daurian larch (the main species) and dark coniferous forests with a predominance of Ayan spruce and whitebark fir (southern part of the Okhotsk coast, lower reaches of the Amur, Sikhote-Alin, basins of the Amguni, Burey, Mai rivers). In the south of the region and in the Middle Amur Lowland there are mixed cedar-broad-leaved forests (Korean cedar, Manchurian ash, maples, elm, Mongolian oak, Manchurian walnut, Amur velvet, several types of birch, linden, etc.). They grow in the forests
personal species of lianas (Amur grape, lemongrass, actinidia). There are many sedge-reed grass meadows, floodplains and dry lands in the region. In the upper part of the mountains there is tundra with thickets of dwarf cedar.

Animal world.
The fauna is characterized by a combination of elements of the fauna of the northern and southern regions. The zone of coniferous forests is inhabited by ungulates (elk, wapiti, wild boar, roe deer, musk deer), fur animals (sable, weasel, fox, squirrel, muskrat, otter, brown bear, wolf, etc.), rodents (squirrel, chipmunk, etc.) , in the far north - reindeer, ermine, wolverine. In the forests of the region there are lynx, black (Himalayan) bear and Ussurian tiger, the American mink has successfully acclimatized. The mixed forests are inhabited by wapiti, roe deer, East Asian wild boar, Manchurian hare, etc.

Common birds include: black grouse, Ussuri pheasant, Indian cuckoo, blue flycatcher, rock and gray thrushes, etc.; a lot of waterfowl.
In rivers and lakes there are over 100 species of fish, including sturgeon: Amur pike, cupid, sturgeon, chebak, silver crucian carp, grayling, catfish, taimen, lenok, bream, carp, burbot, etc. In coastal sea ​​waters— Pacific herring, flounder, smelt, halibut, cod, pollock, navaga, mackerel; migratory salmon: chum salmon, pink salmon; of marine animals - seal, sea lion, beluga.

Minerals.
There are 360 ​​gold deposits recorded on the territory of the region; The mining industry accounts for 23.6% of gold production in the Far East region and 8.6% of the total Russian volume. The region ranks fifth in the Russian Federation in gold mining, and second in platinum mining.
There are deposits of hard and brown coal. In the region, the Adnikanskoye hydrocarbon deposit was discovered within the Verkhnebureinskaya depression.

The preliminary estimate of oil and gas resources is 500 million tons. There are seven large tin mining districts. Thermal and drinking water deposits have been explored and exploited mineral waters.

General characteristics of the Khabarovsk Territory

This subject of the Russian Federation is located in the southeastern part of the Far East. The area of ​​the region is 787.6 thousand square meters. km. The region is part of the Far Eastern Federal District.

In the south, the Khabarovsk Territory borders on the Primorsky Territory, in the southwest the border passes with the Jewish Autonomous Region, the western border passes with the Amur Region, in the northwest with the Republic of Sakha and in the northeast with the Magadan Region.

The Khabarovsk Territory is washed by the waters of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk and the Sea of ​​Japan. It is separated from Sakhalin Island by the Tatar and Nevel Straits. Part of the southwestern border lies with China.

The region includes several islands, the largest of which are the Shantar Islands. This is an archipelago that includes 15 mountainous islands in the Sea of ​​Okhotsk. The islands are covered with ice for almost 8 months of the year, and in 2013 they were declared a national park.

As of January 1, 2016, 1.3 million people lived in the region. The center of the region is the city of Khabarovsk. The territory of the subject stretches from north to south to the border with China for 1800 km, and from the west to the Pacific coast from 125 to 750 km.

Finished works on a similar topic

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Khabarovsk Territory is located in the 8th time zone, which means that the difference with Moscow will be +7 hours. The Khabarovsk Territory was formed on October 20, 1938.

Note 1

The founding and development of Khabarovsk itself is associated with the name of G.I. Nevelskoy, who was the first to determine this location for the city. He believed that the future city would become key in Russian Far East.

In 1858, the Khabarovka military post was created in this place. So, at the behest of N.N. Muravyov-Amursky, the name of E. Khabarov was immortalized, who 200 years earlier founded the first settlements of Russian people on the Amur. The settlement received the more familiar name Khabarovsk in 1893.

Natural conditions of the region

The Khabarovsk Territory is located in the monsoon climate zone, which is characterized by cold winters and humid, hot summers.

The terrain and proximity to the seas have a significant impact on the climate of the region. In the north of the continental part of the region, for example, the average January temperature is -40 degrees, and in the south -22 degrees. On the eastern sea coast the temperature varies from -24 to -18 degrees. The average July temperature ranges from +15 degrees in the north to +20 in the south.

Summer is hot except on the sea coast. In July and early August, humid tropical air masses penetrate into the region, so it rains in the southern regions.

Permafrost is widespread in the northern regions. The relief is dominated by mountain forms with heights from 500 to 2500 m and occupy 70% of the territory. Among them are such famous ridges as

  • Dzhugjur,
  • bajal,
  • Sikhote-Alin,
  • Khingan.

There are small volcanoes in the Amur Valley, others are located on the islands of Bolshoy Ussuriysky and Yadasen.

Note 2

The edge is located in a 6-point seismic zone. The probability of earthquakes is most typical for the northern regions.

Plain forms formed along the valleys of the Amur, Tugur, Uda, and Amguni. The largest is the Middle Amur Plain, which is also very swampy. There are also the Evoron-Tugur Lowland and the Okhotsk Lowland.

More than 120 thousand large and small rivers carry their waters across the territory. Most of them belong to the Amur basin, which is one of the longest rivers in the country.

The largest tributaries of the Amur are

  • Bureya,
  • Tunguska,
  • Gorin,
  • Amgun,
  • Ussuri,
  • Anyui,

The rivers are mainly fed by rain. Spring melt waters are not of great importance. There are about 55 thousand lakes in the region.

Diverse climatic conditions contributed to the formation of different soils - from permafrost soils in the north to brown taiga soils in the south. Like the entire Far East, the Khabarovsk Territory is also characterized by contrast and diversity of vegetation cover.

Here you can find representatives of plant worlds of different origins and composition.

The region is located in the zone of coniferous forests and the zone of mixed coniferous-deciduous forests. The boundaries of the zones run parallel to the direction of the ridges. Forests cover 50 million hectares with a predominance of coniferous species. To the north, the edges of the forest gradually become thinner.

Light coniferous forests in the northern and northwestern parts of the region are represented by Daurian larch and Okhotsk larch. Gradually they are mixed with Ayan spruce and some types of birch trees.

To the south of the permafrost and in the lower reaches of the Amur, the dark coniferous spruce-fir taiga begins.

The Middle Amur Plain is occupied by mixed coniferous-deciduous forests. Broad-leaved species here are represented mainly by Mongolian oak. Schisandra and wild black Amur grapes twine around trees and shrubs.

In the forests of the region, unique medicinal plants grow: ginseng, eleutherococcus, lemongrass, aralia, etc. Unique and diverse animal world forests inhabited by reindeer, ermine, and wolverine. Here you can also meet lynx, Himalayan bear, and Ussuri tiger. The fur world is also diverse - sable, mink, squirrel, weasel, muskrat are the main objects of the fur trade. More than 100 species of fish live in rivers and lakes, including sturgeon and salmon.

Impact of Khabarovsk climate on human health

The climatic conditions of Khabarovsk are most often called unique - Siberian frosts with sunny days and wind that destroys everything.

Summer is similar to Vietnamese - hot and humid. Situated on a small hill, the city is surrounded on one side by a giant Amur floodplain, and on the other side it is surrounded by huge swamps, where constant processes of decomposition of organisms take place during the hot summer.

Such a unique climatic combination can hardly be found anywhere else. One of the factors influencing human health is solar radiation.

The index is the ratio of the share of 90-year-olds to the total number of 60-year-olds. For Russia, this index was 9.16 ‰. In the Far East it turned out to be the lowest - 5.20%, and specifically for the Khabarovsk Territory - 4.93%.

An essential characteristic of climate is the content of water vapor in the air. From a physiological point of view, the norm is considered to be a relative air humidity of 40 to 60%.

The Khabarovsk Territory is located in a humid climate area, where the average annual humidity is 72-78%.

The month of July has the highest absolute air humidity, which is associated with the arrival of sea air masses bringing a large number of precipitation. The bulk of precipitation occurs in the summer, which falls in the form of heavy rainfall.

The summer air is so humid that clothes become damp overnight. Air humidity affects the human body in conjunction with other meteorological factors, enhancing their influence. This factor is air temperature. At the same temperature, moist air is warmer than dry air.

Under such conditions, a person experiences pain in the limbs, worsening mood, and rapid heartbeat.

Another indicator of climate influence is the appearance in summer period so-called stuffy weather, which is formed at high humidity and high air temperature. These weather conditions appear in June and reach their peak in the third ten days of July.

Note 3

Thus, frequent changes in weather with a combination of high humidity and high temperature are assessed in the south of the Far East as a pathological factor in the summer Far Eastern monsoon.

The Khabarovsk Territory is located in the Far East of the Russian Federation on an area of ​​788.6 thousand km2 (4.6% of the area of ​​Russia). The distance from the regional center of Khabarovsk to Moscow is 8533 km. The total population of the region is 1.9 million people, the average density is 2.2 people/km2 - one of the lowest among all subjects of the Federation. Khabarovsk is the main and largest city in the Khabarovsk Territory. Founded in 1858 as a military post Khabarovka (named in honor of the Russian explorer E.P. Khabarov). Since 1880 - the city of Khabarovka, the administrative center of the Primorsky region, since 1884 - the Amur Governor-General. In 1893 the city was renamed Khabarovsk. In 1872, a river port was built in Khabarovsk. The first one was opened in 1873 Primary School. In 1897, Khabarovsk was connected by railway with Vladivostok. IN late XIX V. in Khabarovsk there was a stone Orthodox cathedral, 3 Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches, 11 schools, including a real one, cadet corps, technical railway, women's gymnasium, etc. There was trade in furs. There was a steam mill and several brick factories. In 1891, a monument to Count N.N. Muravyov-Amursky, the Governor-General of Eastern Siberia (led expeditions along the Amur in 1850-55), was unveiled. In 1894, the Amur (Khabarovsk) department of the Russian Geographical Society with a museum and library. In 1902, the Arsenal military plant (now Daldizel) was founded in Khabarovsk. In 1908, the base of the Amur Flotilla was created. At the beginning of the 20th century. Khabarovsk is a major shopping center in the Far East. In 1916, a railway bridge was built across the Amur, connecting Khabarovsk by rail with Eastern Siberia. In November 1922, Khabarovsk became part of the Far Eastern Republic (FER) and became part of the RSFSR. Since 1926 - the center of the Far Eastern, since 1938 - the Khabarovsk Territory. In 1940 it was connected by railway through the Volochaevka station with Komsomolsk-on-Amur. The distribution of the population across the territory of the region is extremely uneven: the southern part is the most densely populated (Bikinsky district - 11.8 people/km2), the northern part is the least densely populated (Ayano-Maisky district - 0.03 people/km2). 78% of the population lives in cities and 22% in rural areas. There are 7 cities on the territory of the region, among the largest are Khabarovsk (612 thousand), Komsomolsk-on-Amur (315 thousand), Amursk (60 thousand), Nikolaevsk-on-Amur (37 thousand). Representatives of about 100 nationalities: Russians (86%), Ukrainians (6.2%), Belarusians (1.1%), Tatars (1.0%), Jews (0.8%), Koreans (0.5%) and other. The working population employed in the forestry sector is 22.2 thousand people or 4.6%. Industry plays a leading role in the regional economy (60% of the total regional product). The region produces 22% of the industrial output of the entire Far East and 1.2% of the industrial output of Russia. The main industries are mechanical engineering and metalworking, food industry, forestry, woodworking and pulp and paper industries, industry building materials. The share of forest products in the total industrial output of the region is estimated at 3%, which approximately corresponds to a similar figure among other densely forested regions of Russia. The Khabarovsk Territory produces 44% of all commercial timber harvested in the Far East, 35% of lumber, 63% of cellulose, 44% of particle boards, 65% of cardboard. The main enterprises of the complex are concentrated in its southern and central parts and gravitate towards railway transport routes and the sea coast. At the same time, over the past 10 years, the region's forestry complex has experienced a serious decline: the volume of wood removal has decreased by 3.5 times, the production of lumber by 11 times, and wood-based panels by 8 times. The structure of the region's timber industry is characterized by an extremely low level of processing of wood raw materials. Industrial round timber (sawlogs, veneer logs and pulpwood) is almost entirely exported. This makes the economy of the forestry complex completely dependent on price conditions on foreign markets, and, above all, Japan. Khabarovsk Territory is one of the most large regions Russian Federation. Its area is 12.7 percent - Far Eastern economic region. The territory of the region extends from north to south for almost 1800 kilometers and from west to east for 125 - 750 kilometers. The distance from its center to Moscow by rail is 8533 km, by air - 6075 km. The region is washed by the waters of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk and the Sea of ​​Japan (Strait of Tatar). The length of the coastline (including the islands, the largest of which are Shantar) is 3,390 kilometers.

On the coast of the Tatar Strait there are water areas convenient for the construction of ports - Chikhacheva Bay, Vanino Bay and especially the unique complex of deep-water, well-protected and extensive bays that form Sovetskaya Gavan Bay. This bay, as well as the neighboring Vanino Bay, are accessible to ships in winter. The region is characterized by a well-developed river network. Most of it belongs to the Pacific Ocean basin (rivers of the Amur basin), the smaller part belongs to the Arctic Ocean basin (rivers of the Lena basin). The territory of the region in the north is 430 km from the Arctic Circle, and the southern tip is located on a parallel running north of the island of Hokkaido and the American city of Portland and slightly south of Rostov-on-Don.

The Khabarovsk Territory has common borders with all administrative units of the Far East, or at least access to them. In the West it borders with the Amur Region, in the North-West with the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), in the North with the Magadan Region, in the East with the Sakhalin Region, from which it is separated by the waters of the Tatar Strait, the Nevelsky Strait and the Amur Estuary, in the south - with the Primorsky Territory and in the southwest - with the People's Republic of China. The border with China runs along the Ussuri River, the Kazakevichevo channel, then along the Amur. Its length is hundreds of kilometers. The border of the Khabarovsk Territory has access to the Pacific Ocean through the Sea of ​​Okhotsk. Transport and transport are carried out through the main seaport of the Khabarovsk Territory - Vanino. economic ties from Magadan and Sakhalin regions. The economic and geographical position of the Khabarovsk Territory is very unique. On the one hand, this is the region most separated from the center of Russia, communications with which are very difficult: until now the only land route remains Trans-Siberian Railway, on the other hand, this is Russia’s exit to Pacific Ocean, to the now rapidly developing Asia-Pacific region, where more than half the world's population lives. Interrelations between the countries of this region are now intensifying, and Russia does not want to remain aloof from this.

annotation

IN course work“Economic and geographical characteristics

Khabarovsk Territory” I reviewed a comprehensive assessment

region in all its diversity and with different sides. Economics revealed

geographical location of the region (profitability of the EGP), given the economic

grade natural conditions and resources (TSPR), considered

demographic situation and labor resources of the region (calculated coefficient

correlation), an economic assessment was carried out (the coefficient was calculated

specialization, a diagram of the energy production cycle has been drawn up) and

transport (characteristics of individual types of transport, calculation

density of transport routes) of the region's complexes, analyzed

environmental problems of the Khabarovsk Territory (impact level calculated

each individual city on the natural environment). The purpose of this work

is to consider the Khabarovsk Territory as a structural unit of TOPS

countries with natural resources, demographic and

economic potential.

Pages 52

Tables 11

Figures 6

Bibliographic sources 13

Introduction…………………………………………………………………………………..1

1. Economic and geographical position of the Khabarovsk Territory……….7

2. Economic assessment of natural conditions and resources……….…11

3. Population and labor resources……………………………………..17

4. Economic complex of the Khabarovsk Territory…………………..21

5. Transport complex of the Khabarovsk Territory………………………37

6. Environmental problems of the Khabarovsk Territory……………………..42

Conclusion.

Bibliographic list.

Introduction

Khabarovsk Territory is located in the Far East of the Russian Federation. In the West and in the north, the Khabarovsk Territory borders on the subjects of the Russian Federation - the Jewish Autonomous Region, the Amur Region, the Republic of Sakha and the Magadan Region. The eastern border of the region passes through the territory of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk and the Sea of ​​Japan, separating the water possessions of the Khabarovsk Territory and the Sakhalin Region. To the south of the region are Primorsky Krai and the People's Republic of China. Khabarovsk Territory is part of the Far Eastern economic region.

The territory of the region occupies 4.6% of the area of ​​Russia. More than half of the region's area is occupied by plateaus and mountains reaching 2500 m in places. A well-developed river network allows the use and development of river navigation, and hundreds and thousands of lakes in the region are rich sources of fish. The climate in the region is moderate, monsoonal, the average temperature in summer does not exceed +24 o C in the southern part of the region and +15 o C in the north, in winter - -23 o C in the south and -40 o C, on the coast: -18 o C and -24 o C accordingly. Annual precipitation is 400 - 600 mm in the north and 600 - 800 in the south; in the mountains this figure sometimes reaches 1000 mm.

The Khabarovsk Territory includes 17 administrative districts and two cities of regional subordination: Khabarovsk (with a population slightly exceeding 612 thousand people) and Komsomolsk-on-Amur (about 298.5 thousand people). In general, there are 7 cities, 27 urban-type settlements and 186 rural administrations in the region. Over 1,571 thousand residents live in the region, about 81% of whom are urban residents.

Khabarovsk Territory is located in the south of the Russian Far East. There are two most important factors that determine the position of the Khabarovsk Territory in the system of Russian regions. First of all, the special economic and geographical position of the region.

The second factor is powerful resource potential. Khabarovsk Territory is one of the richest regions of Russia. This gives it the opportunity to occupy an important place in the country’s economy in a number of raw materials positions.

Land, water and air routes pass through the territory of the Khabarovsk Territory, connecting the interior regions of Russia with Pacific ports, and the countries of the CIS and Western Europe with the states of the Asia-Pacific region.

The purpose of this work is to consider the Khabarovsk Territory as a structural unit of the country's TOPS, which has natural resource, demographic and economic potential.

The objective of the study is to indicate current state natural, social and sectoral components of the region’s economy.

1. Economic and geographical position of the Khabarovsk Territory.

The Khabarovsk Territory is located in the Far East of the Russian Federation on an area of ​​788.6 thousand km 2 (4.6% of the area of ​​Russia). The distance from the regional center of Khabarovsk to Moscow is 8533 km. The total population of the region is 1.9 million people, the average density is 2.2 people/km2 - one of the lowest among all subjects of the Federation.

Khabarovsk is the main and largest city in the Khabarovsk Territory. Founded in 1858 as a military post Khabarovka (named in honor of the Russian explorer E.P. Khabarov). Since 1880 - the city of Khabarovka, the administrative center of the Primorsky region, since 1884 - the Amur Governor-General. In 1893 the city was renamed Khabarovsk. In 1872, a river port was built in Khabarovsk. The first elementary school was opened in 1873. In 1897, Khabarovsk was connected by railway with Vladivostok. At the end of the 19th century. in Khabarovsk there was a stone Orthodox cathedral, 3 Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches, 11 schools, including a real one, a cadet corps, a technical railway school, a women's gymnasium, etc. There was trade in furs. There was a steam mill and several brick factories. In 1891, a monument to Count N.N. Muravyov-Amursky, the Governor-General of Eastern Siberia (led expeditions along the Amur in 1850-55), was unveiled. In 1894, the Amur (Khabarovsk) department of the Russian Geographical Society with a museum and library was created. In 1902, the Arsenal military plant (now Daldizel) was founded in Khabarovsk. In 1908, the base of the Amur Flotilla was created. At the beginning of the 20th century. Khabarovsk is a major shopping center in the Far East. In 1916, a railway bridge was built across the Amur, connecting Khabarovsk by rail with Eastern Siberia. In November 1922, Khabarovsk became part of the Far Eastern Republic (FER) and became part of the RSFSR. Since 1926 - the center of the Far Eastern, since 1938 - the Khabarovsk Territory. In 1940 it was connected by railway through the Volochaevka station with Komsomolsk-on-Amur.

The distribution of the population across the territory of the region is extremely uneven: the southern part is the most densely populated (Bikinsky district - 11.8 people/km2), the northern part is the least densely populated (Ayano-Maisky district - 0.03 people/km2).

78% of the population lives in cities and 22% in rural areas. There are 7 cities on the territory of the region, among the largest are Khabarovsk (612 thousand), Komsomolsk-on-Amur (315 thousand), Amursk (60 thousand), Nikolaevsk-on-Amur (37 thousand)

Representatives of about 100 nationalities live in the region: Russians (86%), Ukrainians (6.2%), Belarusians (1.1%), Tatars (1.0%), Jews (0.8%), Koreans (0. 5%) and others.

The working population employed in the forestry sector is 22.2 thousand people or 4.6%.

Industry plays a leading role in the regional economy (60% of the total regional product). The region produces 22% of the industrial output of the entire Far East and 1.2% of the industrial output of Russia. The main industries are mechanical engineering and metalworking, food industry, forestry, woodworking and pulp and paper industries, building materials industry.

The share of forest products in the total industrial output of the region is estimated at 3%, which approximately corresponds to a similar figure among other densely forested regions of Russia. The Khabarovsk Territory produces 44% of all commercial timber harvested in the Far East, 35% of lumber, 63% of cellulose, 44% of particle boards, 65% of cardboard.

The main enterprises of the complex are concentrated in its southern and central parts and gravitate towards railway transport routes and the sea coast.

At the same time, over the past 10 years, the region's forestry complex has experienced a serious decline: the volume of wood removal has decreased by 3.5 times, the production of lumber by 11 times, and wood-based panels by 8 times. The structure of the region's timber industry is characterized by an extremely low level of processing of wood raw materials. Industrial round timber (sawlogs, veneer logs and pulpwood) is almost entirely exported. This makes the economy of the forestry complex completely dependent on price conditions on foreign markets, and, above all, Japan.

Khabarovsk Territory is one of the largest regions of the Russian Federation. Its area is 12.7 percent of the Far Eastern Economic Region. The territory of the region extends from north to south for almost 1800 kilometers and from west to east for 125 - 750 kilometers. The distance from its center to Moscow by rail is 8533 km, by air - 6075 km. The region is washed by the waters of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk and the Sea of ​​Japan (Strait of Tatar). Length of coastline (including islands, the largest of which

Shantarskiye) - 3390 kilometers.

On the coast of the Tatar Strait there are water areas convenient for the construction of ports - Chikhacheva Bay, Vanino Bay and especially the unique complex of deep-water, well-protected and extensive bays that form Sovetskaya Gavan Bay. This bay, as well as the neighboring Vanino Bay, are accessible to ships in winter. The region is characterized by a well-developed river network. Most of it belongs to the Pacific Ocean basin (rivers of the Amur basin), the smaller part belongs to the Arctic Ocean basin (rivers of the Lena basin). The territory of the region in the north is 430 km from the Arctic Circle, and the southern tip is located on a parallel running north of the island of Hokkaido and the American city of Portland and slightly south of Rostov-on-Don.

The Khabarovsk Territory has common borders with all administrative units of the Far East, or at least access to them. In the West it borders with the Amur Region, in the North-West with the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), in the North with the Magadan Region, in the East with the Sakhalin Region, from which it is separated by the waters of the Tatar Strait, the Nevelsky Strait and the Amur Estuary, in the south - with the Primorsky Territory and in the southwest - with the People's Republic of China. The border with China runs along the Ussuri River, the Kazakevichevo channel, then along the Amur. Its length is hundreds of kilometers. The border of the Khabarovsk Territory has access to the Pacific Ocean through the Sea of ​​Okhotsk. Transport and economic relations with the Magadan and Sakhalin regions are carried out through the main seaport of the Khabarovsk Territory - Vanino. The economic and geographical position of the Khabarovsk Territory is very unique. On the one hand, this is the region most separated from the Center of Russia, connections with which are very difficult: the Trans-Siberian Railway is still the only land route; on the other hand, it is Russia’s access to the Pacific Ocean, to the now rapidly developing Asia-Pacific region, where more than half the world's population. Interrelations between the countries of this region are now intensifying, and Russia does not want to remain aloof from this.

2. Economic assessment of natural conditions and resources.

The climate of the region is monsoon. It is characterized by cold winters and humid, hot summers. Climatic conditions vary significantly both from north to south and depending on proximity to the sea, as well as on the nature of the relief. The average January temperature in continental regions ranges from -22 degrees C in the south, to -40 degrees C in the north, on the coast - from -18 degrees C to -24 degrees C. The average July temperature in the south is +20 degrees C, in the north - +15 degrees C. The growing season (with temperatures of 5 degrees C and above) is from 170 - 177 days in the southern regions, up to 130 days in the north, annual precipitation is 400 - 600 millimeters in the north, and in the southern part - 600 - 800 millimeters on the plains and eastern slopes of the ridges and more than 1000 millimeters in the mountains. Spring in most parts of the territory begins in early March and is characterized by long duration and temperature instability. In the northern regions and on the sea coasts of the region, spring comes a month and a half later. Summer throughout the entire territory, with the exception of coastal and sea areas, is hot. In July - early August, tropical air masses characterized by high air humidity penetrate into the southern regions of the region. At the beginning of autumn, warm, dry weather sets in, and cooling occurs gradually. A sharp cooling in the south occurs at the end of November. In the northern regions and in the mountains, autumn arrives a month earlier. Winter is characterized by sunny weather with severe frosts, often accompanied by winds. On the coast the frosts are somewhat milder. Therefore, the best seasons for tourism are the end of spring - the beginning of summer, the end of summer - the beginning of autumn, when the weather is especially pleasant.

About three quarters of the region's territory is occupied by mountains and plateaus with altitudes from 500 to 2500 meters. Most of the territory is occupied by mountain ranges: Sikhote-Alin, Pribrezhny, Dzhugdzhur - in the east; Turana, Bureinsky, Badzhalsky, Yam-Alin - in the southwest; Yudomsky, Suntar-Khayata (height up to 2933 m) - in the north. In the north-west - the Yudomo-Mayskoye Highlands. The most extensive lowlands are: Lower and Middle Amur, Evoron-Tugur - in the south and central part, Okhotsk - in the north.

The main river is the Amur. There are many small lakes: Bolon, Chukchagirskoe, B. Kizi.

Soddy-podzolic soils predominate on the territory of the region; meadow-marsh and swamp soils are widespread in river valleys.

Significant areas of the Amur and Evoron-Tugur lowlands are occupied by pigweeds and swamps. Mari-natural complex of heavily swampy hummocky shrub-sphagnum low-growing larch open spaces, alternating with treeless peat-hilly sphagnum and sedge-cotton grass bogs, as well as with birch thickets on peat-gley soils and peat bogs. In damp lowlands with close groundwater levels, hummock-sedge bogs with humus-peat-gley soils predominate. In the southern regions, brown-taiga soils are formed, which contain a lot of humus.

KHABAROVSK REGION has large and varied natural resources - land, water, forest and other biological resources of water and land, numerous minerals. According to many of them, the region occupies an important place in the Far East and even in the country (forest, valuable species fish and fur-bearing animals, ores of ferrous, non-ferrous and precious metals, water resources and etc.).
Almost the entire territory of the Khabarovsk Territory is occupied by lands producing biological products. Among them, agricultural land is more intensively used, the total area of ​​which is 695.5 thousand hectares (0.9% of the land fund of the region), including: arable land 131.7 thousand hectares (0.2%), perennial plantings - 24, 3 thousand hectares, hayfields - 410.3 thousand hectares (0.5%), pastures - 124.7 thousand hectares (0.2%). More than 20 million hectares are occupied by reindeer pastures (26% of the region’s territory).

LAND FUND OF KHABAROVSK REGION

The Khabarovsk Territory is one of the largest forest resource areas in Russia. The forests of the region are very diverse in composition - from pure (homogeneous) larch forests to mixed multi-species cedar-broad-leaved forest stands. But the vast majority of forests are dominated by coniferous species (75% of the area and 86% of the wood supply).

The permissible volume of annual felling in the forests of the region is determined at 20.2 million cubic meters. m. However, it can only be used with the use of advanced cutting and reforestation technologies. Currently used technologies make it possible to harvest 12-14 million cubic meters. m per year.

Among the non-timber resources of the Khabarovsk Territory, unique Far Eastern medicinal plants - ginseng, eleutherrococcus, lemongrass, aralia, and a number of herbaceous plants - are of particular value. Promising production essential oils and resin of coniferous trees. Significant food resources include pine and other nuts, wild berries, mushrooms, and ferns. There are many honey-bearing woody and herbaceous plants.

FOREST FUND

Type of land area thousand hectares wood reserves, million cubic meters m
Natural forests 39276 4621
including by dominant breeds:
Korean cedar 802 173
spruce 8182 1429
fir 604 83
larch 19401 2217
pine 554 60
hardwoods 1581 174
including:
ash 107 14
yellow birch 778 86
softwoods 4705 363
including:
white birch 3337 206
aspen 627 54
Unforested lands. intended for growing forests 7288 .
Non-forest lands 8627 .

The fauna is rich and diverse. The zone of coniferous forests is inhabited by ungulates (elk, wapiti, wild boar, roe deer, musk deer), fur animals (sable, weasel, fox, squirrel, muskrat, otter, brown bear, wolf, etc.), in the far north - reindeer, ermine, wolverine. In the forests of the region there are lynx, black (Himalayan) bear and Ussuri tiger, and the American mink has successfully acclimatized. Sable, as well as mink, squirrel, weasel, and muskrat are the main objects of fur hunting.
The region has large reserves of waterfowl and upland game. Up to 98% of the region's territory is classified as hunting grounds, but fishing opportunities are still underutilized. There are over 100 species of fish in rivers and lakes, including sturgeon.
Migratory salmon go to spawn along the rivers flowing into the Sea of ​​Japan and the Sea of ​​Okhotsk, primarily the Amur and its tributaries, to the upper reaches of taiga rivers.
Significant biological resources are concentrated in the coastal waters of the Sea of ​​Japan and especially the Sea of ​​Okhotsk. The northern Sea of ​​Okhotsk is home to the main stock of Pacific herring in the Far East. Of commercial importance are navaga, flounder and some other species of fish, shellfish, algae, as well as marine animals. In the Khabarovsk Territory there are more than 120 thousand large and small rivers with a total flow of 4.5 billion cubic meters. m per year, the total length of the rivers is 541 thousand km. Most of them belong to the Amur system - one of the most long rivers in Russia. Its total length is 4440 km, including more than 1000 km in the region. It carries a huge mass of water over the edge, pouring below the city of Nikolaevsk-on-Amur into the Sea of ​​Okhotsk on average 346 cubic meters per year. km. The largest tributaries of the Amur within the Khabarovsk Territory are the Amgun, Anyui, Tunguska, Bikin, and Ussuri. A vast territory in the north of the region belongs to the Lena River basin (Maya River and others). There are also 55 thousand large and small lakes in the region. The largest of them are located in the Amur River basin: Chukchagirskoye, Bolon, Udyl, Orel occupy an area of ​​300 - 370 square meters. km. The energy resources of the rivers are great, but their use is in many cases limited, since migratory salmon go to spawn along many rivers.

Natural resources of a territory are assessed through territorial combinations natural resources. Bureinsky, Zeysko-Amursky, Nizhneamursky TSPR are characterized by a low level of industrial development.

Conditions for development:

Bureinskoye Zeysko-Amurskoye Nizhneamurskoye

1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5

1 Transport-geographical

2 Level of economic development of the territory

3 Engineering and construction

4 Climatic

5 Water availability

Types of resources:

1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3

1 Intra-district significance

2 Large

3 Largest

b-oil and natural gas

in hydropower

g-ferrous metals

d-non-ferrous metals

e-non-metallic industrial raw materials

Score calculation:

Bureinsky TSPR 2+2+2+2+2+2+1+2=15 points

Zeysko-Amurskre TSPR 2+2+2+2+2+2+2+1+2=17 points

Nizhneamurskoye TSPR 2+1+1+2+3+1+1+2+3=16 points

The region's natural resources are large and varied - land, water, forest and other biological resources of water and land. Significant mineral reserves. According to many of them, it occupies an important place in the Far East and even in the country (forest, valuable species of fish and fur-bearing animals, ores of ferrous, non-ferrous and precious metals, water resources, etc.). More intensive measures are needed to protect and reproduce the region's natural resources.

3. Population and labor resources.

Dynamics of the region's population

1985 1990 1995 1996 1997 2000
Resident population (at the end of the year), thousand people 1522,8 1619,7 1560,4 1546,3 1535 1534,1
including:
urban 1228,3 1309,6 1263,7 1248,8 1240,7 1236,2
rural 294,5 310,1 296,7 297,5 294,3 297,9
Population of working age, thousand people 935,5 984,6 963,3 959,5 958,7
Number of births per 1000 population 18,7 15,1 9,3 8,5 8,2 8,2
Number of deaths per 1000 population 9,2 9,2 13,1 12,7 12,1 13,7
Natural increase, decrease (-) per 1000 population 9,5 5,9 -3,8 -4,2 -3,9 -5,5
Average annual number of people employed in the economy, thousand people 866,2 914,4 676,8 653,7 665,8 778,9
Number of officially registered unemployed, thousand people 40,5 40 27,7 23

POPULATION OF CITIES (as of 01/01/2002)

NUMBER AND DENSITY OF POPULATION BY REGION (as of 01/01/2002)

districts Population
(thousand people)
population density
(persons/sq.km.)
Amursky district 80,2 4,9
Ayano-Maisky district 3,6 0,02
Bikinsky district 26,9 10,8
Vaninsky district 46,7 1,8
Verkhnebureinsky district 32,8 0,5
Vyazemsky district 28,6 6,6
Komsomolsky district 29,0 1,2
District named after Lazo 57,6 1,8
Nanaisky district 21,7 0,8
Nikolaevsky district 47,2 2,7
Okhotsk region 14,3 0,09
District named after P. Osipenko 7,5 0,2
Sovetsko-Gavansky district 51,4 3,3
Sunny area 39,8 1,3
Tuguro-Chumikansky district 2,5 0,03
Ulchsky district 27,0 0,7
Khabarovsk district 81,8 2,7

The urban population, including workers' settlements, is more than 80 percent. The largest cities in the region in terms of population are Khabarovsk (second in the Far East after Vladivostok) and Komsomolsk-on-Amur.

Infant mortality increased by 10%. For every 100 marriages, there are 92 divorces.

We calculate the demographic situation of cities using the potential method:

The calculation table shows that the city of Khabarovsk, the capital of the region, has the highest demographic potential. Therefore, he has the greatest influence over the territory.

Now let’s calculate the correlation coefficient between population indicators and the share of the population employed in various sectors of the economy. The data will be displayed in the table:

∑ 970,1 183 -192 -1 328224,7 61 4246,9

R=4246.9/(286.4*3.9*4)=0.95

The correlation coefficient shows that the majority of the population is employed in various sectors of the economy, which has a beneficial effect on the level of economic development. Compared to other Far Eastern territories, the region compares favorably with its diversity of areas of employment, especially in major cities. Despite the complication of economic conditions, there has been a process of formation of new business structures and, accordingly, people employed in them. Their main field of activity is trade and intermediation.
On average, 1.9 people live per square kilometer of territory, which is more than 4 times less than the Russian average. The national composition of the population is dominated by Russians (86.4%).
Ukrainians make up 6.1%, peoples of the North -1.5%, Belarusians -1.1%, Tatars - 1.0%. Among the small nationalities of the North, there are 10.5 thousand Nanai people, 3.6 thousand Evenks, 2.7 Ulchi, 2.4 Nivkhs, 1.9 Evens. People of working age make up 64.5% of the region's population, and people older than working age make up 16%. Average age residents of the region - 35.8 years.

4. Economic complex of the Khabarovsk Territory.

Electric power industry

Energy - perhaps the main obstacle that could prevent the Khabarovsk Territory from becoming an economically self-sufficient region. An obstacle inherited from the previous management system. Fuel for power plants was transported from afar, from the interior regions of Russia - today high transport tariffs weigh heavily on the cost of industrial production in the region.
This obstacle can be removed. The region has sufficient reserves of solid energy fuel - hard and brown coal. At the same time, their deposits are located in such a way that they can supply not only the main industrial zone in the south of the region, but also power small power plants near northern industrial zones - such as Okhotsk. But there is not only coal in the region - the Sakhalin shelf with rich oil and gas reserves is nearby. And the Sakhalin region, which needs both petroleum products and equipment for shelf development. The Khabarovsk Territory, which has both oil refineries in Khabarovsk and Komsomolsk-on-Amur, the only ones in the Far East, and a unique machine-building complex, can give it both. There is thus a healthy economic basis for regular receipt of sufficient quantities of highly efficient fuel from Sakhalin. The total reserves of local fuel are such that they make it possible to supply not only existing power plants, but also to build new ones, eliminating the need for imported fuel. The same applies to thermal energy.

The installed capacity of ten power plants in the region is 1943 megawatts, of which 95 percent are thermal power plants in industrial centers. The largest power plants are Khabarovsk CHPP-3 (540 MW), Khabarovsk CHPP-1 (462 MW) and Komsomolskaya-on-Amur CHPP-1 (275 MW).

Currently, the Urgal coal deposit is being developed in the region. The capacity of this mine is 2.4 million tons of coal per year.

The oil refining industry of the Far Eastern Economic Region is also concentrated in the region - oil refineries in Komsomolsk-on-Amur and Khabarovsk. Providing over 50 percent of the Far East's demand for petroleum products, they operate on imported oil (9.8 million annually). About 20 percent of oil comes from the fields of Sakhalin via an oil pipeline, 80 percent by rail from Siberia.

The wind energy development program is being practically implemented in the region. The only production base in the Far East for the assembly and installation of wind turbines of various capacities has been created.

Electricity production (billions kilowatt hours)

The priority tasks for the reconstruction of the fuel and energy complex of the region and the entire Far Eastern region include:

  • accelerating the construction and commissioning of power units of the Bureyskaya HPP - the commissioning of this facility will reduce the pressure of high energy tariffs on enterprises and the population;
  • increasing the capacity of Khabarovskenergo JSC - construction of the second stage of Khabarovskaya CHPP-3 and South-Eastern CHPP in Khabarovsk;
  • replacement of outdated equipment and repair of electrical and heating distribution networks.

The project for the construction of the second stage of Khabarovsk CHPP-3 provides for the construction of two power units with a total capacity of: electrical energy- 270 MW, thermal energy - 475 Gcal/hour. The proposed project can be implemented in several stages over five years. Total construction costs will be 500 million USD.
The South-East CHPP in Khabarovsk is designed to generate heat - 1020 thousand Gcal per year and electricity - 110 million kW/h per year.
At the South-East CHPP it is planned to install modern power equipment with increased efficiency, environmental friendliness and reliability. Currently, design and estimate documentation has been developed, a business plan has been drawn up, a construction site has been prepared (26 hectares), 35 and 110 kV power lines and a main road have been connected to the site. To continue construction, an investment of 350 million USD is required, which will be used to finance construction and installation work, the acquisition of building materials and structures, and the purchase of equipment. The construction of the South-East CHPP is planned to be completed within four years.
The construction of the second stage of Khabarovskaya CHPP-3 and South-East CHPP is supported by the Government of the Khabarovsk Territory; investors can be provided with additional guarantees and benefits.

Metallurgy

Ferrous metallurgy. In the structure of marketable industrial output of the region, ferrous metallurgy accounts for 2.8 percent, and industrial production personnel - 4 percent. The production capacity of the only metallurgical plant in the Far East, Amurstal (in Komsomolsk-on-Amur), is 1.8 million tons of steel and 1.56 million tons of rolled products. The main product is sheet steel (57 percent). In addition, the plant produces large and small grade, bent profiles for machine-building, shipbuilding and other industries. The basis of the metallurgical complex of Komsomolsk-on-Amur is made up of the following industrial enterprises: Amurmetall OJSC, DV-Metal Production Association OJSC, Far Eastern Steel Rolling Plant OJSC, Amurstal-Profil OJSC.

The type of enterprise is processing, since the supplier of raw materials is the Siberian Metallurgical Base. The work profile is divided into:
- OJSC "Amurmetal"- production of steel in electric melting furnaces with pouring on continuous casting machines, obtaining billets with a cross-section of 125x125 mm, which are used as billets on a continuous small-section wire mill 320/150 for the production of class A111 (A-400) fittings and wire rod with a diameter of 6-9 mm. in bays.

- JSC “Far Eastern Steel Rolling Plant”- production of long products - steel angles from 50x50mm. up to 80x80mm. and reinforcing steel of periodic profile No. 28,32,36,40.

-JSC “PO DV-metal”- production of sheet metal.
- OJSC “Amurstal-profile”- production of bent profiles, road barriers and electric-welded straight-seam water and gas pipes with a diameter of up to 53 mm. In 2001, ferrous metallurgy enterprises produced 351.7 thousand tons of steel, 342.4 thousand tons of rolled products, 11 thousand tons of bent profiles.

Non-ferrous metallurgy. Non-ferrous metallurgy forms about 6 percent of the commercial output of the region's industry, but satisfies a significant part of Russia's needs for gold and tin. This industry has a pronounced specialization in the production of intermediate products - concentrates, which are exported to the western regions of Russia.

The tin industry is represented by the large Solnechny Mining and Processing Plant. Its commercial products are tin, zinc, copper, lead and tungsten concentrates. The ores used are complex, they contain up to 20 components, from which about 60 percent of tungsten, tin and copper, up to half of zinc and a quarter of lead are extracted.

The region is one of the oldest alluvial gold mining areas in the country. Since 1991, the operation of the Mnogovershinny mine began in the Nikolaevsk-on-Amur region. Further development of the gold mining industry is associated with the expansion of the raw material base, the increase in reserves in placers and the intensification of gold mining in primary deposits.

Mechanical engineering.

Mechanical engineering is the largest industry, employing about 43 percent of all industrial workers. Most of its enterprises work for defense needs. Ocean and river vessels, aircraft, diesel engines and diesel generators, metal-cutting machines, energy and foundry machines, cable products, electric overhead cranes, technological equipment for the fishing industry, and consumer goods are created there. The mechanical engineering industry is a complex unique in its capabilities. It includes factories focused on the production of many types of engineering products - from ships and aircraft of various classes to technological equipment. The core of the complex is defense enterprises. The enterprises included in it are ready to supply to the foreign market, including the countries of Southeast Asia, modern warships for various purposes, landing ships on air cushion, combat aircraft of the “SU” brand, not inferior, and in many characteristics superior to the best foreign analogues. There are great opportunities for the supply of ammunition for small arms and other systems.
The main shipbuilding facilities are located in Komsomolsk-on-Amur (JSC Amur Shipyard), Khabarovsk (Khabarovsk Shipyard), Nikolaevsk-on-Amur (JSC Nikolaev Shipyard). Large enterprises for the construction and repair of ships are located in Sovetskaya Gavan (Northern Shipbuilding Plant OJSC, Yakor OJSC); production of ship equipment in Khabarovsk - JSC “Khabsudmash” (deck mechanisms, winches, ship and pier cranes, water desalination units, water jet ejectors). At the shipbuilding enterprises of the region, the organization of the production process, equipment, production facilities used technological processes and technologies allow the construction of sea, river vessels, vessels with dynamic hovercraft principles, hydrofoils, ocean trawlers and refrigerators, small recreational vessels and others. The Amur Shipbuilding Plant carries out the construction of dry-cargo motor ships of the "river-sea" type of the "Volga" class, timber-packet carriers, sea rescue tugs. The enterprise built the floating base of the Molikpaq mobile drilling platform for the development of the oil-bearing shelf of Sakhalin Island.
Khabarovsk shipyard In terms of the ongoing conversion, it specializes in the construction of a series of civil vessels:
-sea passenger hydrofoil ship “Olympia”;
-marine high-speed multi-purpose boat;
-sea boat on the air cavern "Mercury";
-unified landing hovercraft "Murena";
-speed boat "Terrier";
-fishery protection vessel.
The aircraft manufacturing industry is represented by the Komsomolsk-on-Amur Production Association. According to the conversion program, the enterprise has created a new generation of light multi-purpose aircraft that meet modern requirements and have high export potential:
- amphibious seaplane “Be-103”, maximum load -385 kg (4-6 people);
- transport aircraft “S-80” with a carrying capacity of 3 tons (30 people).

A promising direction is the production of all-terrain vehicles for northern regions and off-road conditions - snowmobiles, amphibious vehicle for use on water, swamps, snow (4-5 people), snowmobiles, all-terrain vehicles, shallow-draft boats for loading and unloading on unequipped shores. The production of television and radio equipment and other household appliances is being developed at the Far Eastern Radioelectronic Plant AVEST subsidiary.
You can get an idea of ​​other possibilities of the metalworking industry in the region from the following list, which is not complete.
JSC "Khabarovsk Machine Tool Plant" - metal-cutting and woodworking machines of a wide range.
OJSC Dalenergomash Plant (Khabarovsk) - hydraulic, steam, gas turbines, pumps, fans, compressors, valves for large-diameter pipelines.
OJSC Daldizel Plant (Khabarovsk) - marine diesel engines and diesel generators of a wide range.
DAO PA “PODMA” (Komsomolsk-on-Amur) - overhead and gantry cranes, serial and according to customer orders.
KSUE “Amur Cable Plant” (Khabarovsk) - power, telephone, ship, signal-interlocking cables, bare wires, winding, installation, etc.
JSC "Electrotechnical Plant" (Komsomolsk-on-Amur) - batteries for internal combustion engines.
The technological capabilities of the listed and other plants go far beyond the scope of today's product range. All this allows us to assert that the manufacturing industry of the region can do a lot. In addition, technological equipment, components, and construction materials are required by the most promising industries of the Khabarovsk Territory - forestry and wood processing, non-ferrous metallurgy and gold mining, the fishing industry, and the transport complex.
Only export-oriented industries of the Khabarovsk Territory are named here. Those whose products have a guaranteed effective demand and are able to pay for machinery and equipment, components, and spare parts.
When assessing the investment potential of the mechanical engineering and metalworking industry of the region, several more important circumstances should be taken into account.

1. Industry products will become cheaper thanks to the administration’s policy to develop the region’s fuel and energy base, aimed at reducing the cost of electricity, as well as energy saving measures.

2. The mechanical engineering and metalworking industry relies on the powerful research and development potential of the region - research and development can be carried out in many areas in this area.

3. Enterprises in the industry are provided with all the necessary personnel - educational establishments The region produces specialists with almost all necessary qualifications.

Fishing industry

Khabarovsk region is rich in fish. The main fishing waters are the Amur River, the coastal waters of the Tatar Strait and the Sea of ​​Okhotsk. About 100 rivers in the region are spawning grounds for salmon and sturgeon. In addition, a large and medium-tonnage fleet fishes in the waters of the Okhotsk and Bering Seas, in the areas of Western and Eastern Kamchatka, the Northern and Southern Kuriles, and Eastern Sakhalin.
There are over 100 species of fish in the Amur River. The main fishing objects are migratory salmon (pink salmon, autumn and summer chum salmon), sturgeon (Kaluga - Amur sturgeon), large and small fish, smelt, and lamprey. In coastal waters, salmon, Pacific herring (spawning), capelin, flounder, and seaweed are caught.
The objects of ocean fishing are pollock (50-60% of the total catch), Pacific herring (feeding), cod, flounder, halibut, greenling, saury, grenadier, squid, shrimp, crabs.
The maximum fishing volume is determined by quotas for each fishing site. Recommendations on the withdrawal of resources and the distribution of quotas are issued by the Pacific Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography - TINRO - center (Vladivostok) and its branches in Kamchatka, Sakhalin, Magadan and Khabarovsk.
The fishing fleet includes:

  • large-tonnage vessels that can operate in any area of ​​the world's oceans and produce finished products (cut frozen fish, fish meal, caviar); they can also accept raw materials from fishermen. The hold capacity and temperature conditions allow these vessels to be used as transport refrigerators;
  • about 60 medium-tonnage vessels, including fishing trawlers and freezer trawlers - universal vessels with an unlimited navigation area - can fish with trawls, purse seines, and on-board electric light traps; the raw material produced by these vessels is transferred to processing vessels (floating motherships, floating plants, refrigerators) of the Khabarovsk, Primorsky, and Sakhalin regions;
  • a fleet of fishing seiners with an unlimited navigation area can fish with trawls at shallow depths, purse seines, onboard electric light traps, and bottom traps; they hand over the catch to floating bases;
  • a fleet of small fishing seiners engaged in coastal fishing.
    In general, the potential of the industry is such that it can produce 350 thousand tons of fish and seafood per year, produce 120 thousand tons of food fish products, 4-5 thousand tons of fishmeal.

Chemical industry

Chemical industry enterprises are located mainly in the cities of Khabarovsk, Komsomolsk-on-Amur and the village of Khor. These include the Komsomolsk sulfuric acid plant, the Khabarovsk oxygen plant, tire repair plants, synthetic detergent plants and chemical-pharmaceutical plants, Khor hydrolysis and biochemical plants.

The main products of the industry are microbiological feed protein (26 thousand tons), sulfuric (50.1 thousand tons) and boric (about 6.4 thousand tons) acids, synthetic detergents (9.1 thousand tons), oxygen and argon, medicines .
A major sub-sector of the industry is the chemical-pharmaceutical industry. The degree of significance is great, but since it currently specializes in processing semi-finished products coming from other parts of the country and produces more than 200 types of medicines. But, along with this, it uses unique opportunities for its development by using local raw materials (ginseng, eleutherrococcus, aralia, zamanikha, antlers, etc.).
Preparations based on Far Eastern medicinal resources are deservedly in high demand in Russia and abroad.

Forestry industry

Khabarovsk Territory is one of the largest forest resource areas in the country. The timber supply in the region is a quarter of the supply in the Far East and more than 6% of the supply in Russia as a whole. The total forested area is 52.5 million hectares, the reserve of mature and overmature species is 3.14 billion cubic meters. meters.
The forests in the region are very diverse in composition, but coniferous forests predominate, occupying up to 80% of the forested area. The northern half of the territory of the region belongs to the zone of light coniferous forests, which are dominated by several species of larch and, in some places, pine. To the south there is a subzone of dark coniferous forests with highly productive spruce and fir plantations. The Middle Amur Plain and nearby mountain slopes belong to the subzone of coniferous-deciduous forests. These are the most productive forest areas. The characteristic tree species in them is cedar pine (“cedar” Korean). The subzone has industrial reserves of valuable hardwood species (ash, oak).
Per 1 hectare of forested area, reserves vary from 40-70 cubic meters. meters in the light-coniferous forests of the Okhotsk coast up to 150-160 in the cedar-broad-leaved forests in the south, reaching 600-700 cubic meters in the most productive areas. meters. By dominant species, the distribution of wood reserves in the region is as follows: larch - 52.2%, spruce and fir - 29.9%, cedar - 2.9%, pine - 2.5%, hardwood - 2.7%, softwood - 6.3%. In the dynamics of forest resources, there is a tendency to reduce mature and overmature plantings, an increase in the share of deciduous forests, and a decrease in the average density and marketability of forest stands.
For forests available for development, the annual estimated cutting area is determined at the level of 18 million cubic meters. meters. However, the actual operational cutting area is estimated by experts at 8-10 million cubic meters. meters. For 2001 In fact, more than 6 million cubic meters have been harvested in the region. meters. Accordingly, the Khabarovsk Territory still has significant resources to increase the volume of procurement.
Generalized characteristics of the region's timber industry complex.
Forestry industry is one of the priority sectors National economy region and its importance is determined by the fact that the share of the forest industry in the total volume of industrial production has been 8-10% for many years. In 2001, enterprises of the region exported 6,558 thousand cubic meters. m of wood, which is the highest figure over the past 9 years. The industry remained one of the leading exporters of products in the region.

The share of forest products in the total industrial output of the region is estimated at 3%, which approximately corresponds to a similar figure among other densely forested regions of Russia. The Khabarovsk Territory produces 44% of all commercial timber harvested in the Far East, 35% of lumber, 63% of cellulose, 44% of particle boards, 65% of cardboard. About a third of harvested industrial wood, up to half of lumber, ¾ of cardboard and all commercial pulp are exported to the Western regions of Russia, the CIS countries and for export.
In the region, about 150 forest fund tenants and more than 260 enterprises and organizations operating for short-term use are engaged in logging, which indicates the economic attractiveness and opportunity to effectively engage in logging.
In the forecast estimate for export volumes for 2010, the regional government is targeting 7-8 million cubic meters. meters. To reach such volumes, it is necessary to systematically and purposefully solve the following tasks:

  • technical re-equipment of timber industry enterprises, including through the introduction of a leasing system;
  • development of wood processing industries, increasing the share of finished products;
  • improving the training system for engineering, technical and management personnel;
  • organizing the production of machinery and equipment for the timber industry at machine-building enterprises of the region on the principles of cooperation with domestic and foreign partners;
  • selection on an alternative basis of environmentally friendly technologies and equipment for logging production, taking into account world practice;
  • efficient use of wood waste and thermal power equipment for the production of electrical and thermal energy.
    The government of the Khabarovsk Territory actively cooperates with various international organizations in their implementation of projects in the field of rational and sustainable use of forest resources.
    The most significant of the international projects implemented in the region over the past 2 years were projects financed by the US Agency for International development(USAID) and Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). In 2000, the Russian Environmental Partnership (REP) project was completed, implemented by the Pacific Rim Taiga company, as a logical continuation of the EPT project, carried out in the Sikhote-Alin mountain range in 1995-1998.
    The activities of the REB project were concentrated in the field of processing of non-timber forest products and wood processing. As part of the project, the development of several business plans and marketing strategies was financed, a number of seminars were held and the Far Eastern Association of Wood Processors was created.
    Within the framework of the ROLL project, active cooperation between the Khabarovsk Territory Forest Management and the US Forest Service continues.
    The role of the forests of the Khabarovsk Territory should be considered not only as an important factor in the economic development of the territory, but also as a significant part of the boreal Siberian forests that shape the planetary climate. In this aspect, the problem of rational, sustainable forest management acquires an international character, necessitating the development of a regional program for maintaining the carbon balance and monitoring it on an ongoing basis.

At the same time, over the past 10 years, the region's forestry complex has experienced a serious decline: the volume of wood removal has decreased by 3.5 times, the production of lumber by 11 times, and wood-based panels by 8 times. The structure of the region's timber industry is characterized by an extremely low level of processing of wood raw materials. Industrial round timber (sawlogs, veneer logs and pulpwood) is almost entirely exported. This makes the economy of the forestry complex completely dependent on price conditions on foreign markets, and primarily in Japan.

Agricultural-industrial complex

Agricultural production in the Khabarovsk Territory develops in difficult natural and climatic conditions with a lack of arable land. There is an average of 0.07 hectares of arable land per inhabitant, which is almost 10 times less than the Russian average.
More than 30 percent of arable land is reclaimed land. The development of new lands, as well as the maintenance of developed lands, require large material costs.
Agricultural production accounts for about 6 percent of the region's gross social product. In the region there are about 60 large agricultural enterprises of all forms of ownership, subsidiary agricultural enterprises of industrial enterprises and organizations and about 900 peasant (farm) farms. Agricultural production is carried out throughout the territory, but its main volumes are concentrated in the south of the region. Cattle and pigs are raised everywhere, and reindeer herding is practiced in the north.
The main crops cultivated in the region are grains, soybeans, potatoes and vegetables. At the same time, a large share of the production of potatoes and vegetables falls on private households.
Food industry The Khabarovsk Territory represents a complex multi-industry complex of enterprises (over 60) related to meat and dairy, flour and feed milling, oil and fat, confectionery, winemaking, baking and other industries, whose products account for 40% of food trade turnover. The most stable, steadily developing enterprises in the industry are:

OJSC “Khabarovskmakaronservis”, OJSC “Amur-pivo”, OJSC “Taiga”, OJSC “Khabarovsky Distillery”, OJSC “Dakgomz”.

In order to identify the volume and structure of agricultural production, it is necessary to calculate the specialization coefficient of the Khabarovsk Territory using the formula: K=F/P.

P=(1534.1*100)/8032=19.1

Grain F=(24.1*100)/310.9=7.75 K=7.75/19.1=0.04

Sunflower F=(0.1*100)/1.3=7.69 K=7.69/19.1=0.4

Potatoes F=(323.6*100)/1378.9=23.47 K=23.47/19.1=1.23

Vegetables F=(137.5*100)/493.9=27.84 K=27.84/19.1=1.46

Meat production F=(13.6*100)/82.5=16.48 K=16.48/19.1=0.86

Milk F=(83.5*100)/669.7=12.47 K=12.47/19.1=0.65

Egg F=(209.5*100)/753.3=27.81 K=27.81/19.1=1.46

As can be seen from the calculations, the production of potatoes, vegetables and eggs is the region’s specialization sectors. All of them are developed in varying degrees, but are important for the economy of the Khabarovsk Territory and play a huge role in providing the population with food.

The region also specializes in ferrous metallurgy, because only the Khabarovsk Territory is a producer of ferrous metals in the Far East. The timber industry is one of the priority sectors of specialization. The fishing industry occupies an important place; it is also a branch of specialization. The study of the economic complex ends with a diagram of the energy production cycle for the fishing industry.

5. Transport complex of the Khabarovsk Territory

Khabarovsk Territory is the “center” of the transport system of the Russian Far East. The administration of the Khabarovsk Territory has made a lot of efforts to develop transport infrastructure:

    Railway lines

Two railway arteries of national importance pass through the territory of the region, crossing the region and connecting the eastern and western regions of the country: the Trans-Siberian and Far Eastern Railways. The ferry from Vanino to Kholmsk (on Sakhalin Island) connects railways on the mainland with the Sakhalin Island railway system. Operating length railway tracks public use - 2.3 thousand km. This is neither more nor less - 25 percent of the length of the network of all Far Eastern roads.

    Waterways

The cargo is transported by waterway to the nearest regions (Sakhalin, Amursk, Magadan, Primorye) and abroad (China). The region has access to the Sea of ​​Okhotsk, the Sea of ​​Japan and the Pacific Ocean. Vanino is the main seaport in the Khabarovsk Territory; in terms of technical capacity it ranks third in the Far East. In addition, there are seaports in Sovetskaya Gavan, Nikolaevsk-on-Amur, Okhotsk, as well as in the villages of Lazarev and De-Kastri. The length of inland shipping routes is 2.5 thousand km.

For river transport, the Amur, Ussuri, Amgun, Tunguska, and Mayu rivers are used for more than 3.2 thousand kilometers. River-sea vessels deliver cargo from Amur ports to the north of the region, to the Sakhalin and Amur regions, to Primorye and the Magadan region. They go to the ports of Japan, Singapore, and China.

    Airways

The new international terminal at Khabarovsk airport was built jointly with Japanese partners; Khabarovsk has connections with more than 40 cities in Russia and the CIS. Flights connect Khabarovsk with the USA, China, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Thailand, Israel and other countries. Here two world transcontinental air corridors intersect, connecting North America with Asia-Pacific countries and Japan with Europe.

    Road system

The road system is best developed in the southern part of the region. Most of the road connections connect Khabarovsk with nearby settlements. The asphalt road between Lidoga and Vanino will soon be completed and will connect Khabarovsk and Komsomolsk with the main seaport of Vanino. Additionally, Khabarovsk has a direct highway connection with Vladivostok. Length highways with hard surface (including departmental) - 8.3 thousand km (82% of the total length).

As a major transport hub, the Khabarovsk Territory will strengthen its position with the development of interregional economic interaction both between the Far Eastern regions and adjacent foreign territories. This is favored by the favorable economic-geographical, transit location of the backbone network and infrastructure facilities with a clear tendency towards the formation of transport and communication corridors. The concept provides for the completion of the second stage of reconstruction of the combined railway-road bridge crossing over the Amur with the laying of a second track. It is planned to reconstruct and modernize a seven-kilometer tunnel under the Amur. A control center will be put into operation in Khabarovsk, which will control the movement of trains based on computer equipment and space communications.
In the field of air transport, it is planned to implement a number of projects. These include organizing the repair of aircraft of Yakut, Sakhalin and other airlines at repair plants in Khabarovsk, while simultaneously resolving the issue of placing the production of spare parts and aviation normals at FSUE KNAAPO.
The project provides for the completion of the Khabarovsk - Lidoga - Vanino highway according to the parameters of the second technical category with the laying of asphalt concrete pavement. The significance of this road is increasing in connection with the prospects for the development of the Vanino seaport, with the possibility of creating a free economic zone in this area, with the prospects for the development of the Khabarovsk and Komsomolsk industrial hubs.

Geographic coordinates of the port: 49 degrees. 5 minutes north. latitude; 140 deg. 19 minutes east. longitude The port of Vanino is the largest transport hub in the Khabarovsk Territory. It is located on the northwestern shore of Vanino Bay in the Tatar Strait. Navigation in the port is open all year round. In winter, when the bay's waters are covered with ice (from January to March), ships are escorted using icebreakers. Through the port, cargo is transported to Sakhalin Island, the Magadan region, Kamchatka, and the northern regions of Russia. The port's cargo turnover consists of ferry cargo, coal, timber cargo, oil cargo, metals, containers, food and refrigerated cargo, construction cargo, fertilizers, and process chips. Passenger ships of the port fleet transport passengers between the following settlements: Vanino - Sovgavan, Sovgavan - collective farm "Zavety Ilyich", Sovgavan - Byaude. The cargo ships of the port fleet transport coal (Vanino - Sovgavan), sand (Muchka Bay - Vanino, Vanino - Sovgavan), sand and gravel mixture (Cape Syurkum - Vanino). The port is served by the Vanino railway station.

Maritime transport is developed. Ports: Vanino (ferry service Vanino - Kholmsk), Nikolaevsk-on-Amur, Okhotsk. Navigation on the river Amur. Belonging to sectors of material production and the connecting role in the intersectoral and territorial division of labor determine the national economic importance of transport. It is important to know the total length of transport routes and their density.

The density of transport routes influences the development of individual sections of the territory and ensures its different types products and consumer goods, resources.

Every year the operational length of roads increases, which shows an increase in the level of development of the region’s transport system.

6. Environmental problems of the Khabarovsk Territory.

The natural specificity of the region, for most of its territory (about 70%), is expressed in the unusually high vulnerability of ecosystems when exposed to human economic activity, which predetermines a more significant (in relation to the ecosystems of the European part of Russia) their transformation under identical load, as well as more extreme and, accordingly, more expensive farming conditions. These features are manifested both directly and indirectly in the formation of the environmental situation in the region.
The economic specifics of the Khabarovsk Territory are largely determined by natural prerequisites and features of the geographical location, which is expressed in the elongation of the territory in the submeridian direction. In this regard, the region is characterized by division into three zones of economic specialization: southern, with a predominance of agricultural sectors; central, distinguished by forestry industries; northern, dominated by mining production. The latter, as an azonal type of environmental management, is quite widespread throughout almost the entire territory of the region. The main processing and integrated industries and industries are concentrated mainly in the leading industrial centers of the southern part of the region. In the region, mining and forestry stand out in terms of the depth and scope of transformation of ecosystems. These industries occupy a leading position in the list of sources negative impact to the natural environment. The basis for differentiation of the territory according to the degree of manifestation of the ecological situation, which consists of a complex that arose in connection with economic activity environmental problems, the following main criteria were established: negative areal transformations of natural complexes, exceeding the maximum permissible concentrations(MPC) and emissions (MPC) of individual pollutants, public health, the state of individual indicators of environmental quality, the ability of ecosystems to perform the most important environmental stabilizing functions. Based on these criteria, for most of the region the environmental situation is assessed as quite satisfactory. A tense ecological situation is observed in areas of intensive logging and large-scale mining (quarries, open-pit mines, mining and processing plants). These are primarily separate territories of the Ayano-Maisky, Verkhnebureinsky, Solnechny, Vaninsky, Komsomolsky, Sovetsko-Gavansky districts. The main environmental problems here are associated with a significant transformation of the surface and, as a consequence, with the destruction and degradation of soil and plant covers, changes in the hydrological regime of surface and groundwater, disruption of the cryological regime, as well as changes in the habitat of fauna and loss of aesthetic attractiveness of landscapes.

Fires, which in 1998 had the character of an environmental disaster, played a special role in shaping the environmental situation in the Khabarovsk Territory in the last decade. The fires, which covered an area of ​​2.5 million hectares (according to the satellite observation system - about 6 million hectares), could not but affect the general environmental situation, forming large areas of central and northern parts edges of areas with a tense ecological situation. The high pyrogenic vulnerability remaining in the burnt areas and their significant area predetermine a long period of natural reforestation, which will not allow these territories to emerge from this state in the coming decades.
Critical ecological situation for the territory of the region - relatively a rare event, compared to 1990, its distribution areas have decreased significantly, which is associated with a significant drop and even curtailment of production. By the beginning of the millennium, according to certain indicators, areas with a critical level of manifestation of environmental problems were characteristic only of the Khabarovsk, Komsomolsk and Urgalo-Chegdomynsk industrial hubs, the outskirts of the village of Mnogovershinny. If for territories characterized by a tense ecological situation, the main environmental problems are confined to vast areas, then the areas of the critical situation are strictly localized and delineated by the boundaries of industrial centers and adjacent territories. A whole range of environmental problems is caused by the functioning of industry and transport.

An ecological framework, the basis of which is protected natural areas, is designed to balance the economic influence and maintain the ecological balance in the territory. Analysis of the ecological state of the territory of the region and its dynamics over the last decade allows us to draw the following conclusions:

  • In general, the environmental situation has improved, which confirms the effect of the “socio-ecological pendulum” of the systemic crisis: environmental improvement occurs against the background of socio-economic deterioration and vice versa.
  • Areas with a crisis ecological situation have disappeared, their rank in terms of severity has decreased, and they are distinguished by environmental problems, the degree of manifestation of which allows these areas to be classified as a critical level of severity. The environmental situation in the city of Amursk deserves attention: the level of manifestation of most environmental problems gives grounds to classify the situation here as satisfactory.
  • Areas with a tense ecological situation have significantly changed their outlines, sizes and spatial localization. Firstly, they have expanded somewhat and there has been a tendency for them to shift to hard-to-reach and highly vulnerable areas, which is associated with an increase in load due to resource-extracting industries. Secondly, these areas have increased to a large extent due to catastrophic fires, and for the central part of the region they now determine the direction and depth of transformation of natural complexes.
  • For most of the territory, the combination of environmental problems has practically not changed, but the severity of their manifestation has decreased for some (air pollution with certain ingredients), and for some has increased (the state of the aquatic environment and especially the Amur River, which predetermined the emergence of the so-called “phenolic” problem) .
  • In industrial centers in the last decade, the “contribution” of motor transport to environmental pollution has increased several times. In terms of severity, this problem is one of the leading
  • In the formation of the most acute environmental problems, especially those related to river pollution. Amur, the influence of China with its intensive economic development has manifested itself more significantly than in previous years
  • A positive aspect influencing the improvement of the environment was the increase in the number and area of ​​protected natural areas in the region, designed to maintain the ecological balance.

Identified modern tendencies the dynamics of anthropogenic load on natural complexes and their ecological interpretation in general indicate a discrepancy between the rate of decline in production and the rate of reduction in loads, an increase in the share of resource-intensive types of environmental management and the expansion of the sphere of their environmental influence, the continuing “polarization” of the spatial distribution of loads, the increasing impact of motor transport on the environment, strengthening the dependence of the ecological situation on the ecological and geographical position of the region.

From the above indicators, it is determined average level impact of urban settlements on the natural environment, which is equal to 798.82.

The population, as a result of its life activities, has an impact on the environment. To determine the level of impact, it is necessary to calculate the average ecological density of the population and identify the average level of impact of urban settlements on the natural environment. HC is determined by the formula: HC = EP/BKP, where

EP - average ecological population density; BCP - bioclimatic potential.

Khabarovsk UV=(600.5*1.5)/0.93=968.5

Komsomolsk-on-Amur UV=(286.7*1.0)/0.93=308.28

Amursk UV=(52.3*1.0)/0.93=56.24

Nikolaevsk-on-Amur UV=(30.6*1.0)/0.93=32.9

From the above calculations it is clear that Khabarovsk has the most significant impact on the environment. Compared to other cities or towns, it pollutes the atmosphere, water, soil, etc. to a greater extent.

Conclusion

Khabarovsk Krai is a young, dynamic region in the Russian Far East, with significant natural resources. His distinctive features are: favorable geographical location, unique natural environment, rich natural resources, industrial and scientific potential, developed transport network and qualified personnel. The growth of interest on the part of the population, local authorities and business circles of the region in expanding international economic cooperation is also important.

Border location, the presence of ice-free sea ports capable of supporting a significant volume of foreign trade transactions, the ability to carry out international transit transportation through the Trans-Siberian and Far Eastern railway lines determine the Khabarovsk Territory to play an important role in the integration of Russia with the countries of the Asia-Pacific region. More than 60 countries of the world have trade relations with the Khabarovsk Territory.

In the world market, the Khabarovsk Territory is known as a manufacturer of products in the field of aircraft and shipbuilding. It is successful in the markets of forest products, ferrous and non-ferrous metals, petroleum products, fish and seafood products.

The region is rich in mineral resources. There are tin, mercury, iron ore, stone and brown coal, graphite, brucite, manganese, feldspar, phosphorites, alunites, building materials, peat.

Industry plays a dominant role in the economy of the region, which is reflected in high degree urbanization of the region. In the total commercial output of industry and agriculture, industry accounts for 92%.

The specific nature of the region's industry is manifested in the high costs of construction and transport, as well as the limitation of primary processing of raw materials industries (forestry and mining industries). At the same time, the level of mechanical engineering development in the region is significantly higher than in other regions of the Far East. It accounts for about 1/4 of the total industrial output. This is more than twice the average for the Far East. The production of mechanical engineering products is concentrated in Khabarovsk and Komsomolsk-on-Amur.

Agricultural land makes up 1% of all land in the region, of which arable land accounts for 17%. Wheat, barley, soybeans, potatoes and vegetables, fodder crops, fruits and berries are grown in the region. Livestock farming has a meat and dairy focus. Reindeer husbandry (in the north of the region), fur farming and hunting are developed. Due to the region's own production, 30-40% of the demand for milk and meat, and 55-60% for vegetables and potatoes are met.

The Khabarovsk Territory occupies key positions in the unified transport system of the Far East.

A number of interregional projects remain priorities for the near future. This is the development of the Tunguska groundwater deposit, the construction of a coal terminal in Vanino, the construction of the Sakhalin - Khabarovsk - Vladivostok gas pipeline, etc. In this case, it is considered important to provide resource support for investment programs through both budgetary funds and loans from domestic and foreign banks. Fortunately, there are neighbors nearby (Japan, China, the Republic of Korea), who have enormous financial resources that could be used for support.

Thus, the geographic location of the Khabarovsk Territory and its microregions determines the levels of possible self-identification of residents along the “vertical of regions” and self-perception as “citizens of the world.” It also determines the degree of consolidation of the regional community, its awareness and cultural openness, mobility, contact with representatives of other Russian regions, foreign countries, subcultures, religions, etc. On this basis, it can be argued that: in geocultural terms, there is a significant gap between the south-central and northern regions of the Khabarovsk Territory; the regional center, in its increasing “separation” from Moscow, is increasingly taking on the role of a culture-forming factor in its region, attracting young people and influencing their ethical, aesthetic and existential values.

Bibliography:

1. Alimov R., Zhokhova L. Analysis of the efficiency of placement of production forces in Siberia and the Far East. – M. Finance, 1998

2. Atlas of the Khabarovsk Territory / A. M. Makhinov, pred. ed. count -Khabarovsk, 2000.

3. Business map of Russia. Far East. Industry. Book 1/ Comp. O.V. Yuferev and others - M.: MP "NIK", 1998.

4. Granberg A., Ishev V. Program of economic and social development Far East and Transbaikalia.//Economist. 2001 No. 9.

5. Far East - the possibility of cooperation with the countries of the Asia-Pacific region // Economist. 1998 No. 6.

6. Morozova T.G. and etc. Regional economy. - M., 1996.

7. Natural-economic zones: edited by V.V. Leshkevich, Yu.A. Sem. 1998.

8. Dripped O.M. Socio-economic potential of the federal subjects of the Russian Far East - Khabarovsk, KhSTU Publishing House, 1999.

9. Regional studies: Textbook for universities / Ed. prof. T.G. Morozova. - M.: Banks and exchanges, UNITY, 1998.

10. Regional economics: Textbook for universities / Ed. prof. T.G. Morozova. - 2nd ed. - M.: Banks and exchanges, UNITY, 1998.

11. Regional economics: Textbook / Edited by M.V. Stepanov - M.: INFRA-M, Publishing House of the Russian Economic Academy, 2000.

12. Khabarovsk Territory is 60 years old: Statistical collection. - Khabarovsk, 1998.

13. www.adm.khv.ru/invest2.nsf/ - Server of the Government of the Khabarovsk Territory.

Khabarovsk Territory was formed in 1938. It is one of the largest constituent entities of the Russian Federation in size. The area of ​​its territory is 787.6 thousand square meters. km, or 4.6 percent of the territory of Russia (4th place in the Russian Federation) and 12.7 percent of the territory of the Far Eastern Federal District (hereinafter also referred to as the Far Eastern Federal District) (2nd place in the Far Eastern Federal District).

The population of the region as of January 1, 2008 was 1,403.7 thousand people (0.99% of the population of the Russian Federation, 21.6% in the Far Eastern Federal District). In terms of population, the region ranks second in the Far Eastern federal district and 34 in the Russian Federation.

Khabarovsk Territory is the administrative, industrial, scientific, educational and cultural center of the Far East and is part of the Far Eastern Federal District.

The distance to Moscow by rail is 8,533 km, by air - 6,075 km.

Geographical location and administrative structure Khabarovsk Territory

The Khabarovsk Territory lies in the temperate zone of the northern hemisphere, stretching from south to north for 1,780 km, from west to east - for 125 - 750 km. It borders with China, neighbors the Primorsky Territory, the Amur and Magadan regions, the Jewish Autonomous Region, and the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). The region is washed from the east by the Seas of Okhotsk and Japan, and is separated from the island by the Tatar and Nevelsk Straits. Sakhalin, the length of its coastline is 2.5 thousand km.

The administrative-territorial system of the region includes 236 municipalities, including two urban districts, 17 municipal districts, 29 urban settlements, 188 rural settlements.

The largest cities are the administrative capital of the region, Khabarovsk (577.3 thousand inhabitants, 2nd place in the Far Eastern Federal District), Komsomolsk-on-Amur (272.4 thousand inhabitants, 3rd place in the Far Eastern Federal District).

Natural and climatic conditions and tourist and recreational potential of the Khabarovsk Territory

Most of the territory of the region is occupied by mountains that form the Sikhote-Alin, Dzhugdzhur, and Badzhal mountain ranges. The maximum height is 2,933 m. There are about 1.5 thousand large, medium and small rivers in the region, including one of largest rivers Russia - Amur, many large and small lakes.

There are about 100 species of fish in rivers and lakes. The fauna of the Khabarovsk Territory includes 70 species of mammals and more than 360 species of birds. More than 51.2 million hectares are occupied by forests in the region.

The climate of the Khabarovsk Territory is continental with well-defined monsoon features. Winter is long and harsh, dry and sunny. The average air temperature in January ranges from -22ºС in the south to -40ºС in the north; on the coast from -18 to -24ºС. Summer is warm and humid, the average July temperature in the south is +22ºС, in the north +14ºС. The duration of the frost-free period in the south of the region is 130 – 150 days, in the central and northern regions from 90 to 130 days. Annual precipitation ranges from 400 mm in the north to 800 mm in the plains.

The tourism and recreational potential of the region is due to the favorable geographical location of the region, its economic development, high concentration and diversity of natural resources, and rich cultural and historical heritage.

The territory of the region is unique in the abundance of unusual landforms, rivers, lakes, a combination of rare species of plants and animals and their communities, as well as an untouched natural landscape. There are about 250 natural monuments on the territory of the region. The Amur River is one of the main attractions of the region, in the valley of which the largest number of natural, cultural and historical tourist sites are concentrated.

There are more than 360 monuments in the region cultural heritage, of interest for the development of cultural, educational, ethnographic tourism. Khabarovsk Territory is one of the most multinational regions in Russia. A special ethnographic area is formed by the indigenous small peoples of the North: Nanai, Udege, Ulchi, Orochi, Evenki, Nivkh and others. Among the objects of ethnographic tourism, the most interesting is the unique archaeological monument “Petroglyphs of Sikachi-Alyan” (rock paintings of ancient inhabitants dating back to the 12th millennium BC).

Potential of natural resources of the Khabarovsk Territory

Mineral resource base

Mineral resource potential is one of the main competitive advantages of the region.

The share of reserves of the main types of minerals of the Khabarovsk Territory in the mineral resource potential of the Far Eastern Federal District is platinum - 50 percent, gold - 8 percent, tin - 20 percent, copper - 50 percent, coal - 7.5 percent .

There are significant reserves of non-ferrous and rare metals and building materials. Deposits of agrochemical raw materials, colored stones, mineral underground waters, medicinal mud and mineral paints have also been identified.

Areas that are promising for tungsten, platinum group minerals, oil and gas have been identified in the region.

It should be noted that the geological knowledge of the region is poor. Geological survey on a scale of 1:50000, at the stage of which most deposits and ore occurrences are identified, was carried out on only 35 percent of the territory of the region, which is typical for the Far Eastern region as a whole.

Aquatic biological resources

The main fish resources of the Khabarovsk Territory are represented by freshwater and marine aquatic organisms.

Freshwater resources of the Khabarovsk Territory are mainly associated with the river. Cupid. More than 30 species of fish are of commercial importance, 20 of which have high commercial value. These are Pacific anadromous salmon (chum salmon, pink salmon, Dolly Varden char, masu salmon), sturgeon (Kaluga and Amur sturgeon), some types of large fish (pike, carp, silverfish, catfish, silver carp, taimen, lenok, whitefish, yellowjacket, bream). Every year, 5–9 thousand tons of fish are caught in the inland waters of the region.

In the coastal waters of the Tatar Strait and the Sea of ​​Okhotsk, salmon, Pacific herring (spawning), capelin, flounder, kelp, and crabs are caught. Annual volume of catch of aquatic biological resources in coastal zone is 34 – 40 thousand tons.

Water resources

The water supply to the population of the region is one of the highest in Russia - about 330 thousand cubic meters. m per person. There are about 206 thousand rivers in the region, including the smallest and smallest, with a total length of more than 550 thousand km with a total flow of almost 400 cubic meters. km per year. The main water artery is the Amur River, one of the largest rivers in Russia, ranking fourth in terms of water content after the Yenisei, Lena and Ob. The mouth of the river is accessible to sea vessels, which can ascend through high water to the city of Khabarovsk.

The hydropower potential of the rivers of the Khabarovsk Territory is 23 billion kWh per year.

There are more than 58 thousand large and small lakes in the region with with total area water surface is about 4 thousand square meters. km. The largest of them are located in the Amur River basin: Bolon, Orel, Chukchagirskoye. In the region there is a part of the Bureya reservoir with an area of ​​373 square meters. km, there are 2 reservoirs with a volume of more than 1 million cubic meters. m each.

The predicted operational resources of groundwater in the Khabarovsk Territory are about 48 million cubic meters. m per day. In total, about 40 deposits have been explored in the region.

Among mineral waters, carbon and nitrogen waters are the most common. The most famous are three deposits of mineral waters: Annensky thermal springs, Tumninskoye and Mukhenskoye.

Land resources

The area of ​​the land fund of the Khabarovsk Territory as of January 1, 2008 amounted to 78,763.3 thousand hectares, of which agricultural lands account for 375.8 thousand hectares (0.5% of the territory of the region), lands of settlements - 420.2 thousand hectares (0.5%), forest fund lands - 73,707.4 thousand hectares (93.6%), reserve lands - 1,384.1 thousand hectares (1.8%), water fund lands. “961.4 thousand hectares (1.2%), lands of specially protected natural territories and objects – 1,646.2 thousand hectares (2.1%), industrial lands and other special purpose- 268.2 thousand hectares (0.3%).

The total area of ​​agricultural land in all categories of land amounted to 665.9 thousand hectares (0.9% of the total land fund of the Khabarovsk Territory).

As of January 1, 2008, citizens and legal entities owned 62.8 thousand hectares (less than 0.1% of the land fund of the region). The share of land in state and municipal ownership amounted to 99.9 percent (78,700.5 thousand hectares).

Forest resources

The Khabarovsk Territory stands out as the largest timber resource region in the country. The timber reserve is 6.6 percent of the timber reserves of the Russian Federation and 25.3 percent of the timber reserves of the Far Eastern Federal District.

The main forest-forming species occupy an area of ​​44.7 million hectares, including conifers - 37.5 million hectares (84.1%), hardwoods - 1.5 million hectares (3.3%), softwoods - “ 5.7 million hectares (12.6%).

The reserve of the main forest-forming species is 4.85 billion cubic meters. m, of which conifers are 4.27 billion cubic meters. m (88.2%), hardwood - 0.18 billion cubic meters. m (3.6%), soft-leaved – 0.40 billion cubic meters. m (8.2%).

The stock of mature and overmature plantings possible for exploitation is 1.42 billion cubic meters. m, including conifers - 1.25 billion cubic meters. m (88.5%), hardwood – 81.0 million cubic meters. m (5.6%), soft-leaved – 83.3 million cubic meters. m (5.9%).

The estimated cutting area (annual supply rate) for 2007 amounted to 23.6 million cubic meters. m, including available – 15.4 million cubic meters. m. Actual forest felling for the main use in 2007 amounted to 7.9 million cubic meters. m.

Specially protected natural areas

In the Khabarovsk Territory, 6 state natural reserves with a total area of ​​2,107 thousand hectares have been created and operate, of which 1,699.2 thousand hectares are a protected area, a national park with an area of ​​429.37 thousand hectares, as well as 5 state natural reserves federal significance, the total area of ​​which is 734.2 thousand hectares.

The largest area in the system of regional specially protected natural areas is occupied by 20 state regional reserves - 2,444.9 thousand hectares (3.1% of the territory of the region). Among them, 6 reserves have an ichthyological (fishery) profile with a total area of ​​334.8 thousand hectares.

In order to ensure the preservation of spatial-genetic connections and the integrity of the Amur tiger population in the Far East, 4 ecological corridors with a total area of ​​156.6 thousand hectares have been formed in the region.

In the Khabarovsk Territory there are more than 60 natural monuments of regional significance. These include unique, irreplaceable, ecologically, scientifically, culturally and aesthetically valuable natural complexes, as well as objects of natural and artificial origin. The most famous natural monuments of regional significance include the landslide Lake Amut in the Solnechny municipal district, the arboretum of the Forestry Research Institute and the nursery named after Shuranov in the center of Khabarovsk, and the rock outcrop "Shaman" in the Komsomolsky municipal district.

The Red Book of the Khabarovsk Territory includes 310 objects of flora and 159 objects of fauna.

Economic potential of the Khabarovsk Territory

Khabarovsk Territory is one of the most economically developed territories of the Russian Far East. In terms of gross regional product, the region ranks 3rd in the Far Eastern Federal District and accounts for 0.9 percent of the total gross regional product in the Russian Federation for 2006. The region ranks 20th in the Russian Federation in terms of gross regional product per capita and 2nd in the Far Eastern Federal District in terms of the volume of shipped goods of its own production.

In terms of investment volume, the region accounts for 1.15 percent in Russia and ranks 3rd in the Far Eastern Federal District. According to the Expert RA rating agency, the Khabarovsk Territory is classified as a “growth pole” region, which indicates the region’s ability to further socio-economic development and improve its investment position.

According to research by the National Institute for Systematic Research of Entrepreneurship Problems, Khabarovsk Territory is among the 10 best regions of the Russian Federation in terms of the increase in the number of registered small enterprises per 100 thousand inhabitants as of October 1, 2007.

According to the results of a comprehensive study of regional competitiveness, carried out in 2008 by the autonomous non-profit organization "Institute of Regional Policy" with the support of the Ministry of Regional Policy of the Russian Federation, Khabarovsk took 19th place out of 82 subjects of the Russian Federation for which the research was conducted, and entered the group of competitiveness leaders.

According to research conducted in 2007 by the Institute for the Development of the Information Society with the support of the Ministry of Information Technologies and Communications of the Russian Federation, the Khabarovsk Territory took 10th place in the ranking of the readiness of Russian regions for the information society.

According to Forbes magazine (June 2008), the capital of the Khabarovsk Territory and the Far Eastern Federal District, Khabarovsk, took eighth place in the ranking of the best cities for business among 85 Russian cities with a population of more than 200 thousand people.

The basis of the economy of the Khabarovsk Territory is a fairly diversified industrial production, which includes a number of military-industrial enterprises. The volume of shipped products (works, services) from mining, manufacturing, production and distribution of electricity, gas and water in the region is more than a fifth of the volume of the Far Eastern Federal District.

The region produces the bulk of engineering products, forest materials, petroleum products, steel and all rolled steel in the Far Eastern Federal District.

In 2007, the region ranked third in the Russian Federation in the extraction of precious metals and timber removal.

The transport system of the region represents one of the key transport hubs of the Far Eastern region. The transit functions of the region, located in the center of the Far East, have great importance not only regionally, but also nationally and internationally. Two railway lines pass through the territory of the region - the Trans-Siberian and the Baikal-Amur, providing access to the main Pacific ports of the country. Between the mainland railway network and the island. Sakhalin operates a Vanino-Kholmsk ferry service.

The largest international airport in Khabarovsk in the Far East accepts aircraft of all types. Regular air routes connect Khabarovsk with more than 40 cities in Russia and the CIS countries; air connections have been established with the People's Republic of China (Beijing, Harbin, Guangzhou, Dalian), Japan (Niigata, Aomori), and the Republic of Korea (Niigata, Aomori). Seoul), Israel (Tel Aviv), Thailand (Bangkok).

With the commissioning of the second stage of the bridge across the river. The Amur near Khabarovsk and the Chita – Khabarovsk highway will significantly strengthen the region’s position in road transport and transit of road cargo.

Foreign economic activity has a significant impact on the regional economy.

*Taking into account the export of petroleum products produced in the region.

In the structure of regional exports, the largest share is occupied by machinery and equipment, petroleum products, unprocessed timber, ferrous and non-ferrous metals, fish and seafood, and lumber.

*Excluding the export of petroleum products produced in the region.

The region's main trading partners are China, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, the USA, and Vietnam, which accounted for more than 80 percent of the total value of the region's foreign trade turnover.

The largest regional exporters to last years were LLC "RN - Komsomolsk Oil Refinery", LLC "Alliance-Khabarovsk", LLC "Khabarovsk Fuel Company", OJSC "Amurmetal", CJSC "Smena-Trading", LLC "Dalvtorsyrye", OJSC "Khabarovsk Shipbuilding Plant", CJSC " Flora", LLC JV "Arkaim".

In the structure of regional imports, the largest share falls on textiles, textile products and footwear, machinery and equipment.

Over the past 7 years, the macroeconomic situation in the region was characterized by the following growth rates in the production of goods and services, investments in the economy and the social sphere (Table 1).

Table c„– 1

Russian V V V V V V V V V V V V V Federation

Khabarovsk region

Far Eastern Federal District

2007 to 2000 (percent)

Gross domestic product – the sum of regions (gross regional product)

Industrial production index

Investments in fixed capital

Agricultural products

Transport freight turnover

Retail trade turnover

Real average wage

Moreover, the lag in the industrial production index and gross regional product from the rates in the Russian Federation and the Far Eastern Federal District was due to a sharp decrease in production volumes at the Komsomolsk-on-Amur Aviation Production Association named after Yu.A. Gagarin in 2006 in connection with the completion of export contracts, which in previous years accounted for up to 80 percent of the enterprise's production volumes.

The main indicators of the socio-economic development of the Khabarovsk Territory for 2000 – 2007 are given in Appendix 1.

During the period 2001 - 2007, the number of people employed in the economy increased by 59.7 thousand people, output per person employed in the regional economy increased by 27.8 percent (in comparable estimates), per 1 ruble of fixed assets - by 54 percent, energy intensity decreased by 31.3 percent.

Investments in fixed capital during this period per person employed in the regional economy increased by 72.3 percent (in a comparable estimate), per 1 ruble of fixed assets - by 70 percent.

Payments to the federal budget and the regional budget increased 2.5 times per person employed in the regional economy, and per 1 ruble of fixed assets - by 33 percent in current prices.

Indicators characterizing the development of the economy in the region are presented in appendices 2, 3.

In 2006, the gross regional product of the Khabarovsk Territory amounted to 196.2 billion rubles, the growth rate of its real volume compared to the 2005 level was 105.3 percent. In 2007, the growth trend of the regional economy continued; according to estimates, the gross regional product amounted to more than 234 billion rubles, with an increase of 7 percent compared to the 2006 level. The average annual growth rate for the period 2001–2007 was 105.8 percent.

In the structure of the gross regional product of the Khabarovsk Territory (hereinafter also referred to as GRP), the main place is occupied by mining, manufacturing and production and distribution of electricity, gas and water - 25.4 percent in 2006, 18.3 percent accounted for by transport and communications, 15.2 percent - for trade and public catering, agriculture and forestry - 7 percent, construction - 7.5 percent, real estate transactions, rental and provision of services - 9.2 percent, other types of economic activity - “17.4 percent.

Historically, the Khabarovsk Territory has developed an industrial structure of the economy with a fairly diversified industrial production, including a complex of military-industrial enterprises.

Demographic and migration potential of the Khabarovsk Territory

As of January 1, 2008, the total permanent population of the Khabarovsk Territory was 1,403.7 thousand people, including 1,130.8 thousand people (80.6%) urban residents and 272.9 thousand people (19 .4%) – rural.

About 80 percent of the territory of the region belongs to the regions of the Far North and equivalent areas, where 43 percent of the population lives. Representatives of 17 indigenous peoples of the North live compactly in the ethnic villages of the region. According to the 2002 population census, the total number of indigenous peoples of the North is 23 thousand people (9.4% in the Russian Federation). The most numerous of them are the Nanais (8.2 thousand people), Evenks (3.5 thousand people) and Ulchi (2.5 thousand people).

The population is distributed unevenly throughout the region. The specific features of settlement are due to the significant extent of the territory, the remoteness of settlements from the regional and regional centers, and their inaccessibility. The maximum population density is observed in the cities of Khabarovsk - 1,443.4 people per 1 sq. km and Komsomolsk-on-Amur - 908.2 people; the smallest in Ayano-Maisky, Tuguro-Chumikansky and Okhotsk regions - 0.02 - 0.03 people per 1 sq. km. The average population density in the region as of January 1, 2008 was 1.8 people per 1 sq. km, which is 1.6 times higher than in the Far Eastern Federal District and 4.6 times less than in Russia as a whole.

Of the total population, the population below working age was 16 percent, working age - 66.1 percent, and above working age - 17.9 percent.

The life expectancy of the population of the Khabarovsk Territory in 2007 was 64.8 years, in Russia - 67.5 years, in the Far Eastern Federal District - 64.9 years.

The demographic situation in the region reflects the average Russian trends in recent years and is characterized by a reduction in the total number and an aging population.

The economically active population is about 54 percent of the permanent population.

Distribution of the number of people employed in the economy by level of education in 2006 (percentage of the total number of employees)

Among those employed in the economy, more than 33 percent have professional higher education, more than 31 percent - secondary vocational education, 21 percent - complete secondary (general), about 9 percent - vocational primary education.

Migration of the population had a negative impact on the formation of the population potential of the region, with the exception of 2003, in which the region had a positive migration balance of 554 people, and in 2007, respectively, 1,904 people. In 2007, the positive balance of migration is associated with changes in statistical registration of foreign citizens and stateless persons.

Today, the existing demographic potential in the region is insufficient for dynamic socio-economic development and ensuring national security.

Labor resources

Over the period 2000 - 2007, the number of labor resources in the Khabarovsk Territory increased by 2.7 percent due to an increase in persons over working age employed in the economy by 20.4 percent, and an increase in the number of foreign workers by 5.7 times. At the same time, the working age population decreased by 1.7 percent during this period.

In 2007, the labor force in the region amounted to 980.6 thousand people, or 69.8 percent of the total population. About 80 percent of the total labor force falls on the economically active part of the population, of which 95 percent are employed in the economy.

Economic growth in recent years has led to positive changes in the labor market – an increase in employment and a decrease in unemployment. Over the period 2000 - 2007, over 100 thousand new jobs were created, of which more than 40 percent were in the small business sector.

Dynamics of employment in the Khabarovsk Territory (thousand people)

As a result, employment during this period increased by 8.8 percent, the total number of unemployed decreased by half - from 93.5 thousand people to 44.4 thousand people, the overall unemployment rate decreased from 12.2 percent to 5.9 percent from the economically active population (Russia - 6.1%).

In the medium term, the state of labor resources in the Khabarovsk Territory will be determined mainly by the unfavorable development of the demographic situation and in the future may become a limiting factor in socio-economic development.

Ensuring transparency of the activities of the regional executive authorities

To increase the transparency of interaction between the executive authorities of the region and civil society, separate elements of “electronic government” are being created in the region.

In 2008, the website “Regulatory and Legal Acts of the Khabarovsk Territory” was put into operation, where the current acts of the Governor and Government of the Khabarovsk Territory since 2005 are posted, and informational portal public services, which provides information on more than 80 government services provided to citizens, and more than 70 government services provided to organizations. A section “Administrative regulations of public services (functions)” has been created, which contains approved administrative regulations, draft proposed administrative regulations, on which the population and organizations can give their comments. Over the 10 months of 2008, there were 128 thousand visits to the pages of this section.

Enterprises and organizations widely use the “Purchases” section of the Krai Government website, where information is posted on ordering procedures (notices, protocols, etc.) for the supply of goods, performance of work, and provision of services for state and municipal needs of the Khabarovsk Territory. In 2007, 1.46 million visits to the pages of this section were recorded.

This Web site contains information for entrepreneurs and investors about the availability of production space available for organizing or expanding a business on production space proposed for sale or lease.

Since 2002, the website “Small Business of the Khabarovsk Territory” has been operating, where information of interest to entrepreneurs is posted (regulatory, analytical, statistical, etc.).

The interaction between business and government is carried out within the framework of the work of the Council on Entrepreneurship under the Governor of the Khabarovsk Territory, the interdepartmental council under the Government of the region to eliminate barriers to the development of entrepreneurship.

The Ministry of Economic Development and External Relations of the Khabarovsk Territory operates a "helpline" organized by the Government region in 2006 on the issues of eliminating administrative barriers in relations between entrepreneurs and federal, regional executive authorities and local governments.