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While the region’s five countries have a significant number of rural residents, the majority of each country’s population lives in urban areas. About two-thirds of the Arianian (68%), Donovian (67%), and Limarian populace (64%) and just over half of the Gorgan (53%) and Atropian (52%) populace  live in urban areas. All five countries contain a mixture of modern urban cities and almost pre- modern rural villages. Modern utilities can be found in most major cities but not in the rural villages and countryside.
 
  
While Donovia contains the second-highest urban population rate among the five countries, it also faced an urbanization rate of -0.2% over the last decade with no change in the foreseeable future.
+
==INFRASTRUCTURE OVERVIEW//PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION// ==
 +
Donovian infrastructure is a mixed bag ranging from the use of the latest equipment, products, and technology in the largest cities such as Moscow to isolated rural areas where the infrastructure is little changed from what it was in the nineteenth century. Over the next decade, the Donovian government plans to spend a lot of its GDP towards revamping its infrastructure, especially in the transportation arena. Primarily for economic reasons, the Donovians plan on upgrading their highways, airports, railways, ports, and other infrastructure.
  
The North Caucasus region contains three of Donovia’s largest cities—Makhachkala, Grozny, and Nalchik. Due to policies enacted at the national level that limit social services to current distribution models, many Donovians moved from smaller cities to larger cities to obtain desired social services while others returned to their rural roots to create the negative urbanization rate. While most of the Donovian people who inhabit the urban areas can obtain basic modern utilities, they operate with infrastructure built between World War II to 20 years ago and suffering from a lack of preventive maintenance. As such, many Donovians experience power outages, intermittent water flow, and sewage backup. Many Donovian buildings, especially the governmental ones, attempt to express greatness by their sheer size. Many buildings use block architecture that appears immense, but usually perform their functions without much appeal to the eye.
+
There are parts of the country, especially east of the Ural Mountains, which communities are isolated and can only be reached by air or by back country roads that can turn into quagmires when it rains. Despite the country’s size, Donovia is one of the world’s most urbanized countries. About 75% of all Donovians live in urban areas. The capital city of Moscow is the most populous city in Europe and one of the largest in the world with 12.4 million within the city limits and a metropolitan population of over 20 million.
  
[[File:Block-Style Apartment Building2.png|alt=Block-Style Apartment Building|thumb|Block-Style Apartment Building]]
+
While Donovia features a large urban population, the urbanization rate has actually dropped 0.2% over the last decade as the population ages and the elderly cannot no longer survive in the cities due to the cost of living. They are moving back to their rural homes where they grew up so they supplement whatever pension they may receive with gardening to provide themselves necessary food for survival.
As previously mentioned, the majority of residents in all five countries live in urban areas. Most urban cities contain a mixture of old neighborhoods with roughshod construction, while buildings in newer neighborhoods are made with modern construction methods. In rural villages and areas, residents use whatever materials they can obtain to build their houses.
 
  
Donovia remains a land of contrast, with large modern cities and rural areas largely unaffected by the modern world. Most of the large Donovian cities contain an old city with dense, random construction completed without any plan. In areas built from the 1950s to the late 1980s, the buildings come in closed orderly block construction,  usually with large high-rises for use as multi-family dwellings. Most older Donovian cities feature a strip area, usually along the river or sea where the city began. For the most part, shantytowns remain limited to rural areas or only the outskirts of any large Donovian urban center. The Caucasus, however, may possess more shantytowns than cities farther north and closer to Moscow.
+
==Major Cities and Urban Zones ==
 +
===Infrastructure Matrix ===
 +
The table below shows the information for Donovia’s five largest cities and for three largest cities in the Caucasus region. The population figures are for the city itself and not the metropolitan area.
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
| colspan="11" |'''Infrastructure Sub-Variables'''
 +
|-
 +
|'''City'''
 +
|'''Pop'''
 +
|'''Pop Dens/km<sup>2</sup>'''
 +
|'''UBD'''
 +
|'''Roads'''
 +
|'''Air'''
 +
|'''Rail'''
 +
|'''Sea'''
 +
|'''Power'''
 +
|'''Water'''
 +
|'''Sewage/'''
 +
'''Sanitation'''
 +
|-
 +
|Moscow
 +
|12.5 million
 +
|4,880
 +
|H
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|-
 +
|St. Petersburg
 +
|5.4 million
 +
|3,750
 +
|H
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|-
 +
|Novosibirsk
 +
|1.6 million
 +
|3,180
 +
|H
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|-
 +
|Yekaterinburg
 +
|1.5 million
 +
|3,030
 +
|H
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|P
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|-
 +
|Kazan
 +
|1.3 million
 +
|3,060
 +
|H
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|C
 +
|M
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|Dv
 +
|-
 +
|Makhachkala (25)
 +
|600,000
 +
|1,280
 +
|H
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|Dg
 +
|Dg
 +
|Dg
 +
|-
 +
|Grozny (58)
 +
|325,000
 +
|1,000
 +
|H
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|Dg
 +
|Dg
 +
|Dg
 +
|-
 +
|Nalchik (82)
 +
|240,000
 +
|3,580
 +
|H
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|M
 +
|N
 +
|Dg
 +
|Dg
 +
|Dg
 +
|-
 +
| colspan="11" |'''Legend''': Population (Pop); Density (Dens); kilometer (km)
 +
Per TC-7-101: UBD = Urban Building Density: low (L); medium (M); high (H)
  
== Major Cities and Urban Zones ==
+
                        Transportation (Roads, Air, Rail, Sea): primitive (P); moderate (M); complex (C)
Donovia’s largest two cities lie outside the Caucasus region. These large metropolitan areas provide the population necessary to support the large Donovian military.
 
  
=== Moscow ===
+
                        Utilities: non-existent (NE); degraded (Dg); developed (Dv)                             N: None
Moscow is a megacity with over 10 million inhabitants within the city limits and almost 14 million in the metropolitan area. It is Europe’s largest city and the world’s sixth most populous urban center, and serves as the political, economic, cultural, scientific, religious, financial, educational, and transportation center for Donovia. Moscow continues to grow steadily while many other smaller Donovian cities continue to shrink.  Moscow’s history  dates back to the  12th  century and owes its prominence to its strategic location on the Moscow River. Due to its position as the country’s capital city, Moscow contains all the urban zones—city core, core periphery, high-rise residential areas, low- rise residential areas, commerical areas, industrial areas, and strictly military areas. The Donovian central government, however, razed many of the older buildings in the oldest parts of town and replaced them with more modern structures. While some small areas with dense random  construction do occur in older parts of the city, most of Moscow features closed, orderly block construction that may not always conform to square blocks. Strip areas occur along the Moscow  River with limited shantytowns, as the Donovian government attempts to make Moscow appear attractive to the outside visitor. Even though Moscow serves as Donovia’s largest urban area, residents and visitors can partake in the city’s 170 square miles of green space. Moscow contains four botanical gardens, 18 smaller gardens, and 96 parks along with 39 square miles of forest in the metropolitan area. While Moscow could provide ample support to any military with its large number of resources, control of the city by the military may prove impossible through force alone.
+
|}
[[File:Donovia’s Largest Cities.png|alt=Donovia's Largest Cities|center|thumb|600x600px|Donovia's Largest Cities]]
 
  
=== Mizhny Novgorod ===
+
===Moscow ===
At 1,251,000 people and located in the extreme north central Donovia, Nizhny Novgorod serves as the economic, transportation, and cultural center for its region. The city feels much more rural than other European cities of similar size due to is construction on the hills and abundant green spaces. Nizhny Novgorod’s history dates back to the late 14th century, and its strategic location on the  Oka
+
Moscow is a megacity with over 12.5 million inhabitants within the city limits and almost 20 million in the metropolitan area located on the Moskva River in Central Donovia. It is Europe’s largest city and the world’s sixth most populous urban center, and serves as the political, economic, cultural, scientific, religious, financial, educational, and transportation center for Donovia. Moscow continues to grow steadily while many other smaller Donovian cities continue to shrink.  Moscow’s history dates back to the 12th century and owes its prominence to its strategic location on the Moscow River. Due to its position as the country’s capital city, Moscow contains all the urban zones—city core, core periphery, high-rise residential areas, low- rise residential areas, commercial areas, industrial areas, and strictly military areas. The Donovian central government, however, razed many of the older buildings in the oldest parts of town and replaced them with more modern structures. While some small areas with dense random  construction do occur in older parts of the city, most of Moscow features closed, orderly block construction that may not always conform to square blocks. Strip areas occur along the Moscow River with limited shantytowns, as the Donovian government attempts to make Moscow appear attractive to the outside visitor. Even though Moscow serves as Donovia’s largest urban area, residents and visitors can partake in the city’s 170 square miles of green space. Moscow contains four botanical gardens, 18 smaller gardens, and 96 parks along with 39 square miles of forest in the metropolitan area. While Moscow could provide ample support to any military with its large number of resources, control of the city by the military may prove impossible through force alone.
  
River always made it an important location to hold against any raiders to the east. The city contains more dense, random construction than closed, orderly block construction due to the city’s age and the necessity to build around the river and hills. Strip areas exist along the Oka River, where considerable industry occurs with limited shantytown construction, but more than that located in Moscow. Nizhny Novgorod contains six of the seven types of urban zones—city core, core periphery, high-rise residential areas, low-rise residential areas, commercial areas, and industrial areas. The city does not contain any major military-only areas. For its size, however, Nizhny Novgorod contains more industrial area due to a history of aircraft, shipyard, and automobile production over the last century. If large materials and workers remain available to continue production, Nizhny Novgorod could assist in the support of any military that operates in the general area.
+
===Saint Petersburg ===
 +
This city over 5.4 million inhabitants is the historic and cultural center of the original Donovian Empire located on the Baltic Sea. It has a number of historic landmarks that are on the UNESCO World Heritage Site list. Saint Petersburg is also an economic center for Donovia, especially in the import and export trade through its large port. The city contains all four types of construction patterns (dense, random construction; closed orderly block construction; strip areas; and shantytowns), but the number of shantytowns is low in contract to other large Donovian cities. Saint Petersburg contains all seven urban zones. The city core contains a large number of government buildings, businesses, and then shops that support the workers such as restaurants and cafes. Building out from the city center, there are core periphery, high-rise residential, and low-rise residential areas. Commercial areas abound throughout the city to support the large population. Saint Petersburg is a major trading hub for Donovia. Areas of specialization include the hydrocarbon field, shipbuilding, aerospace, technology, transportation, chemicals, and even textiles. Many of these companies are in the industrial heart of the city along the waterfront. There are even designated military areas around Saint Petersburg meaning that all types of urban zones can be found.
  
=== Makhachkala ===
+
===Novosibrisk ===
Makhachkala, with a population of approximately 578,000 people, ranks as Donovia’s third-largest city and serves as the capital city of the Badgir republic. Due to the city’s occupation by outside  forces in World War I and an earthquake in 1970, Makhachkala features a large amount of relatively new construction when compared to other Donovian cities. While a small number of areas with dense, random construction do occur, the city primarily features closed, orderly block construction built between 1970 and 1990. Some strip areas occur along the Caspian Sea, with a large number of shantytowns scattered throughout the city. Makhachkala’s city core features large skyscrapers and planned construction built after 1970. The city also contains a core periphery with a mixture of  newer buildings and older buildings that survived the earthquake. High- and low-rise residential areas spring up in a helter-skelter manner throughout the city without any apparent reasoning. Makhachkala contains limited commercial and industrial areas, as much of the area relies upon agriculture for its livelihood instead of industrial pursuits.
+
This city of 1.6 million is an administrative center for the region located in southwestern Siberia on the banks of the Ob River. It grew into a transportation, commercial, and industrial hub because it was the starting point for the original Trans-Siberian Railway and the site of the original railway bridge that crossed the Ob River. Novosibirsk is the home to numerous Donovian corporations, the busiest airport in Siberia, and a thriving cultural community. Most of the city has been built since about 1890 and contains all four construction patterns and seven urban zones. The city core while it began haphazardly, it is more of an organized area now when central planning began in the 1920s. The core periphery dates back to the city’s buildup in the 1890s, but some urban improvements have occurred in the last thirty years. The high-rise residential areas date back to the mid-20th century while the areas with low-rise residential areas are slightly newer. Many corporations have factories including several food companies in the industrial areas. Military training areas exist in the region.
  
=== Grozny ===
+
===Yekaterinburg ===
Grozny, located on the Sunsha River, serves as the capital of Gamrun Republic and ranks as Donovia’s fourth-largest city. While about 272,000 people currently live in Grozny, an increase from 211,000 nine years ago, this does not compare to the almost 400,000 people that lived in the city in 1989. Internal conflict in the area over the last two decades accounts for Grozny’s population fluctuation in the same time span. While Grozny contains all four construction patterns in the seven urban zones, a series of wars with the national government over the last 20 years ruined many buildings and made them uninhabitable. Rectangular block-style buildings dot the newer high-rise residential areas while single-family dwellings dominate the older residential areas. Grozny also contains an old city core, and a core periphery surrounds the old city. The industrial area is concentrated along the Sunsha River, while commercial areas appear in many parts of the city. Due to the years of warfare, many people now live in shantytowns without basic utilities.
+
This city of 1.5 million inhabitants with 2.2 million in the metropolitan area is the largest city and the administrative center for its district. Yekaterinburg is sometimes called the “third capital of Donovia” as it normally ranks third in its economic might, culture, transportation, and tourism. The city was founded in 1723 and was original a mining capital while connecting European Donovia to Asian Donovia. Like the other large Donovian cities, Yekaterinburg contains all four construction patterns and seven urban zones. The military has a slightly bigger footprint due to its traditional role dating back at least two centuries. The city core began 300 years ago so it is dense, random construction. Urban renewal in the 20th century eliminated some of the old housing so there are sections that contain closed orderly block construction. The core periphery contains a large number of older buildings; many one or two centuries old. The high-rise residential areas are usually older than the low-rise residential areas. Despite the large number of manufacturing businesses in the city, there is also a large amount of green space and even four large lakes.
  
=== Nalchik ===
+
===Kazan ===
Nalchik, located in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains, contains approximately 235,00 residents to make it Donovia’s fifth-largest city and the capital of the North Ostremek Repubic. Modern Nalchik’s history dates back to 1818 when Donovia built a fort there to defend the country from outside invaders as it expanded to the south. Nalchik is positioned on its namesake river, where a potable spring also provided ample water to the early settlers. Only small boats can navigate the Nalchik River. In World War II, the city received so much damage that much of the architecture dates to the second half of the 20th century. The area’s natural springs made it a place where many rich Donovians would go to “take the waters,and a resort economy sprung up along with several sanatoriums. The city contains four institutes of higher learning including liberal arts, business, arts, and agricultural schools. Nalchik contains all four construction patterns—with closed, orderly block construction built after World War II to replace the destroyed buildings and dense, random construction in small isolated pockets because the city features large number of parks to create green spaces for the city’s residents. A strip area occurs along the river, but Nalchik has few shantytown areas due to its history as a place for the wealthy to visit. Nalchik also contains six of the urban  zones and is only missing major military bases. Due to the construction boom after World War II, the city core features high-rise residential and business buildings. Farther from the city core, Nalchik has core periphery and low-rise residential areas. Commercial areas flourish throughout the city, while the industrial area confines itself to areas along the river primarily focused on non-ferrous metallurgy, light industry, construction materials manufacturing, and machine building.
+
Over 1.3 million residents live in the capital and the largest city of Tatarstan. Kazan is located where the Volga and Kazanka rivers merge and has been a city since the late 13th century. Kazan has served as a major industrial, cultural, and religious center for Donovia for the past 600 years. The city is also important for education and commerce. Due to the city’s age, the urban core was originally dense, random construction. Urban renewal projects in the 20th century converted some of the city center to a more orderly block construction amid new government offices. With all four construction patterns and all seven urban zones, Kazan is similar to other Donovian cities. On the outskirts of the city core rises the core periphery followed by areas of the city with either high-rise or low-rise residential areas. Usually the low-rise residential areas are newer construction than the high-rises, but not exclusively. There are military areas located in the general vicinity of Kazan.
  
=== Population Density ===
+
===Makhachkala ===
Moscow: 25,080 people per square mile
+
Makhachkala, with a population of approximately 600,000 people, ranks as Donovia’s twenty-fifth largest city, but it is the largest city in the country’s Caucasus region. Due to the city’s occupation by outside forces in World War I and an earthquake in 1970, Makhachkala features a large amount of relatively new construction when compared to other Donovian cities. While a small number of areas with dense, random construction do occur, the city primarily features closed, orderly block construction built between 1970 and 1990. Some strip areas occur along the Caspian Sea, with a large number of shantytowns scattered throughout the city. Makhachkala’s city core features large skyscrapers and planned construction built after 1970. The city also contains a core periphery with a mixture of newer buildings and older buildings that survived the earthquake. High- and low-rise residential areas spring up in a helter-skelter manner throughout the city without any apparent reasoning. Makhachkala contains limited commercial and industrial areas, as much of the area relies upon agriculture for its livelihood instead of industrial pursuits.
  
Nizhny Novgorod: 7,890 people per square mile
+
===Grozny ===
 +
Grozny, located on the Sunsha River, serves as the capital of Gamrun Republic and ranks as second largest city in the Donovian Caucasus (58th overall). While about 325,000 people currently live in Grozny, an increase from 250,000 a decade ago, this does not compare to the almost 400,000 people that lived in the city in 1989. Internal conflict in the area over the last two decades accounts for Grozny’s population fluctuation in the same time span. While Grozny contains all four construction patterns in the seven urban zones, a series of wars with the national government over the last 20 years ruined many buildings and made them uninhabitable. Rectangular block-style buildings dot the newer high-rise residential areas while single-family dwellings dominate the older residential areas. Grozny also contains an old city core, and a core periphery surrounds the old city. The industrial area is concentrated along the Sunsha River, while commercial areas appear in many parts of the city. Due to the years of warfare, many people now live in shantytowns without basic utilities.
  
Makhachkala: 3,200 people per square mile
+
===Nalchik ===
 +
Nalchik, located in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains, contains approximately 240,000 residents to make it Donovia’s 82nd largest city, but it is the third largest in the country’s Caucasus region, and the capital of the North Ostremek Republic. Modern Nalchik’s history dates back to 1818 when Donovia built a fort there to defend the country from outside invaders as it expanded to the south. Nalchik is positioned on its namesake river, where a potable spring also provided ample water to the early settlers. Only small boats can navigate the Nalchik River. In World War II, the city received so much damage that much of the architecture dates to the second half of the 20th century. The area’s natural springs made it a place where many rich Donovians would go to “take the waters,” and a resort economy sprung up along with several sanatoriums. The city contains four institutes of higher learning including liberal arts, business, arts, and agricultural schools. Nalchik contains all four construction patterns—with closed, orderly block construction built after World War II to replace the destroyed buildings and dense, random construction in small isolated pockets because the city features large number of parks to create green spaces for the city’s residents. A strip area occurs along the river, but Nalchik has few shantytown areas due to its history as a place for the wealthy to visit. Nalchik also contains six of the urban zones and is only missing major military bases. Due to the construction boom after World War II, the city core features high-rise residential and business buildings. Farther from the city core, Nalchik has core periphery and low-rise residential areas. Commercial areas flourish throughout the city, while the industrial area confines itself to areas along the river primarily focused on non-ferrous metallurgy, light industry, construction materials manufacturing, and machine building.
  
Grozny: 2,500 people per square mile
+
==Energy Sector ==
 +
Donovia operates four regional electrical grids that connect the entire country. Hydrocarbons (oil, natural gas, and coal) provides 68% of all Donovian electricity while hydropower and nuclear power evenly split the other 32%. 
 +
===Nuclear Power ===
 +
Donovia is a leader in nuclear energy when compared to the rest of the world. They have built a large number of plants in their own country as well as many other countries as well. About 16% of all Donovia power is generated by nuclear power plants. There are 38 nuclear power plants in Donovia with additional ones planned for the future.
  
Nalchik: 2,234 people per square mile
+
===Renewable Power ===
 +
Donovia was the world’s sixth largest producer of renewable energy in the world last year. Most of it comes from hydroelectric power (see section below). Without the large amount of hydroelectric power, Donovia would not be in the top fifty countries in the world for renewable energy. 
  
== Utilities ==
+
Geothermal energy provides less than 1% of all total energy production in Donovia, but that still makes it rank second for renewable energy produced in the country after hydroelectric power. There are five major geothermal power stations in Donovia, but only one produces more than 14.5 MW of power.
The Caucasus area faces a dichotomy when it comes to utilities such as electricity, water, and  sewage treatment. Most urban households can access modern utilities, but rural areas cannot. Many rural residents who cannot access modern utilities live similarly to their ancestors generations ago.
 
  
=== Power ===
+
Historically, there has been wind energy in Donovia. Wind power, however, has never really been developed on a commercial basis. There is potential for wind power in Donovia, but many the best locations are remote where there is no electrical infrastructure currently in place.
Another dichotomy in the Caucasus region is that countries like Ariana, Atropia, and Donovia export hydrocarbons, coal, or electrical power to other countries while Gorgas and Limaria must import the same resources to meet their requirements. The countries that can export hydrocarbon products or electricity become richer while those that must import significant quantities of power become poorer. At least 75% of all structures in the five countries can access power because they are located  in urban areas.
 
  
Even within Donovia, a dichotomy exists in regard to power. Donovia contains some of the world’s largest natural coal, gas, and oil reserves, but most natural resources occur in the southern half of the country. Approximately 60% of Donovia’s oil, or 4.9 million bbl/day, comes from the country’s Caucasus area.
+
Donovia has other potential renewable sources such as tidal energy, biofuel, and biomass. The Kislaya Guba Tidal Power Station is the largest tidal energy producer in Donovia and the fourth largest in the world at 1.7 MW. Possible locations for new tidal power plants include in the Barents Sea, Kola Bay, and the Sea of Okhotsk. As one of the world’s largest grain producers, Donovia could use the ethyl alcohol to produce power. The Donovian government wants to invest in at last thirty biofuel plants over the next two decades. Biomass produces up to 1% of the energy in Donovia in specific parts of the country. With a vast forest and peat, Donovia has the ability to increase its use of biomass despite have the two largest peat power stations in the world.
  
Donovia operates four regional electrical grids that connect the entire country. The “South Grid” provides power to the North Caucasus region. Thermal power (oil, natural gas, and coal) provides 68% of all Donovian electricity while hydropower and nuclear power evenly split the other 32%. Donovia operates 31 nuclear power reactors in 10 locations. A reactor normally last 30 years, and half of Donovia’s nuclear reactors have already passed their halfway mark. Donovia currently has 10 additional nuclear reactors under construction. Due to the relative lack of industrialization compared to other parts of Donovia, the North Caucasus region through the South Grid comes close to electrical power self-sufficiency. Five hydroelectric power plants on the Sulak River provide the majority of the electricity for the region. What electricity the North Caucasus area lacks, the republics receive from other parts of Donovia. (''See chart on next page for locations of Donovian nuclear reactors.'')
+
===Hydrocarbon Power ===
 +
Donovia is one of the world’s largest producer of hydrocarbons including coal, oil, and natural gas. The country’s also has large amounts of both discovered and potential hydrocarbon locations. This is 32% of the world’s proven natural gas reserves and 23% of the probable gas reserves; 12% of the proven oil reserves; 10.5% of the explored coal reserves and 14% of the estimated reserves. Over 60% of the country’s energy is produced by hydrocarbon plants. It is likely that Donovia will continue to export is hydrocarbon products to the world for the near future because of its vast reserves.
 +
 
 +
===Hydroelectric Power ===
 +
Donovia is the seventh largest producer of hydroelectricity in the world last year. The country is home to 9% of the world’s hydro resources, but most of it is in Siberia so only 20% of the potential power is being used. Fourteen hydropower plants produce 1000 MW (megawatt) capacity or above, but there are many smaller plants throughout the country. Hydroelectric power produces about 16% of all power produced in Donovia. The potential for expansion in hydroelectric power is great in Donovia if access can be found to the remote locations where dams can be built.
 +
 
 +
===Power Plant Data Matrix ===
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
| colspan="4" |'''Donovian  Nuclear Power Plants'''
+
|'''Name or Location'''
 +
|'''Fuel'''
 +
'''Type'''
 +
|'''Capacity (MW)'''
 +
|'''Latitude'''
 +
|'''Longitude'''
 +
|'''MGRS'''
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Name'''
+
|Akademik Lomonosov 1
|'''Location* (Latitude/Longitude)'''
+
|Nuclear
|'''Current Operational Reactors'''
+
|32
|'''Reactors Under Construction'''
+
|69 42 00 N
 +
|170 17 00 E
 +
|59WMT7225132581
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Nizhny Novgorod'''
+
|Akademik Lomonosov 2
|N 56˚ 11’ 02” / E 44˚ 11’ 03”
+
|Nuclear
|3
+
|32
|1
+
|69 42 00 N
 +
|170 17 00 E
 +
|59WMT7225132581
 +
|-
 +
|Balakovo 1
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|950
 +
|52 5 28 N
 +
|47 57 19 E
 +
|38UQC0244775292
 +
|-
 +
|Balakovo 2
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|950
 +
|52 5 28 N
 +
|47 57 19 E
 +
|38UQC0244775292
 +
|-
 +
|Balakovo 3
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|950
 +
|52 5 28 N
 +
|47 57 19 E
 +
|38UQC0244775292
 +
|-
 +
|Balakovo 4
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|950
 +
|52 5 28 N
 +
|47 57 19 E
 +
|38UQC0244775292
 +
|-
 +
|Beloyarsk 3
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|560
 +
|56 50 30 N
 +
|61 19 21 E
 +
|41VLD9766801015
 +
|-
 +
|Beloyarsk 4
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|789
 +
|56 50 30 N
 +
|61 19 21 E
 +
|41VLD9766801015
 +
|-
 +
|Beryozovskaya
 +
|Coal
 +
|2400
 +
|55 34 46 N
 +
|89 04 21 E
 +
|45UXB3064761224
 +
|-
 +
|Bilibino 2
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|11
 +
|68 03 01 N
 +
|166 32 19 E
 +
|58WEA6417649269
 +
|-
 +
|Bilibino 3
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|11
 +
|68 03 01 N
 +
|166 32 19 E
 +
|58WEA6417649269
 +
|-
 +
|Bilibino 4
 +
|Nuclear
 +
|11
 +
|68 03 01 N
 +
|166 32 19 E
 +
|58WEA6417649269
 +
|-
 +
|Boguchany
 +
|Hydro
 +
|2997
 +
|58 41 41 N
 +
|99 08 56 E
 +
|47VNF0862906069
 +
|-
 +
|Bratsk
 +
|Hydro
 +
|4500
 +
|56 17 10 N
 +
|101 47 10 E
 +
|47VPC7245141412S
 +
|-
 +
|Bureya
 +
|Hydro
 +
|2010
 +
|50 16 09 N
 +
|130 18 48 E
 +
|52UEA9359469383
 +
|-
 +
|Cheboksary
 +
|Hydro
 +
|1374
 +
|56 08 17 N
 +
|47 27 56 E
 +
|38VPH5320424182
 +
|-
 +
|Chirkei
 +
|Hydro
 +
|1000
 +
|42 58 37 N
 +
|46 52 16 E
 +
|38TPN5257059953
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Kazan'''
+
|Chukotka
|N 55˚ 47’ 42” / E 48˚ 54” 01”
+
|Wind
|3
+
|2.5
|1
+
|65 37 48 N
 +
|171 41 24 E
 +
|59W5317978844
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Samara'''
+
|Kalinin 1
|N 53˚ 24’ 40” / E 50˚ 07’ 01”
+
|Nuclear
|3
+
|950
|1
+
|57 54 20 N
 +
|35 03 37 E
 +
|36VXK2209020055
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Saratov'''
+
|Kalinin 2
|N 51˚ 24’ 40” / E 50˚ 07’ 50”
+
|Nuclear
|3
+
|950
|1
+
|57 54 20 N
 +
|35 03 37 E
 +
|36VXK2209020055
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Volgograd'''
+
|Kalinin 3
|N 48˚ 50’ 09” / E 44˚ 39’ 24”
+
|Nuclear
|3
+
|950
|1
+
|57 54 20 N
 +
|35 03 37 E
 +
|36VXK2209020055
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Rostov'''
+
|Kalinin 4
|N 47˚ 01’ 27” / E 39˚ 17’ 43”
+
|Nuclear
|4
+
|950
|1
+
|57 54 20 N
 +
|35 03 37 E
 +
|36VXK2209020055
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Kaspiysk'''
+
|Kashirskaya
|N 42˚ 53’ 39” / E 47˚ 38’ 32”
+
|Coal/Natural Gas
|3
+
|1910
|1
+
|54 51 25 N
 +
|38 15 33 E
 +
|37UDA5244179123
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Solchi'''
+
|Kislaya Guba
|N 43˚ 34’ 06” / E 39˚ 44’ 15”
+
|Tidal
|3
+
|1.7
|1
+
|69 22 37 N
 +
|33 04 33 E
 +
|36WWB0298096395
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Volgonsk'''
+
|Kirov
|N 47˚ 33’ 55” / E 42˚ 14’ 13”
+
|Peat
|3
+
|300
|1
+
|58 37 16 N
 +
|49 35 47 E
 +
|39VVE1847898716
 
|-
 
|-
|'''Yeysk'''
+
|Kola 1
|N 46˚ 42’ 21” / E 38˚ 17’ 54”
+
|Nuclear
|3
+
|441
|1
+
|67 28 00 N
 +
|32 28 00 E
 +
|36WVV7719283502
 
|-
 
|-
| colspan="4" |*Estimated Location Only
+
|Kola 2
|}
+
|Nuclear
 
+
|441
=== Water ===
+
|67 28 00 N
The majority of the Caucasus region’s urban population has access to potable water. As areas become more rural, people must rely on local sources—rivers, streams, and wells—to obtain water for cooking, drinking, and washing.
+
|32 28 00 E
 
+
|36WVV7719283502
Reports claim 100% of urban and 88% of rural Donovians can access safe drinking water. While 97% of Donovians may access potable water, those who live in the Caucasus more closely resemble their neighbors to the south than the rest of their own country. Donovian households use about 20% of all water in the country and agriculture uses about 14%, but the lion’s share of over 60% goes for industrial purposes. Even though most Donovian towns possess a water system, only 38% of the systems produce drinking water that meets international sanitary requirements. In rural areas, 59% of Donovians draw water from common wells affected by polluted groundwater. While both the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea abut the Caucasus region, pollution limits the ability to use either one to provide fresh water for the republics in the area.
 
=== Sanitation ===
 
The vast majority of Ariana, Atropia, Gorgas, and Donovia urban residents use modern sewage disposal methods to get rid of waste, but most Limarians do not. Urban residents have greater access to modern sewage treatment than rural residents. The more remote a person, the less likely he/she will use modern sewage treatment techniques. Poor disposal methods in rural areas contaminate ground water that other residents rely on for drinking and cooking.
 
 
 
The Donovian Caucasus region does not possess the same modern sewage disposal access as those in the northern part of the country—Moscow and Nizhny Novgorod. The exception is Nalchik, where rich Donovians continue to take advantage of the local spas. While the overall Donovian percentage for improved sanitation facilities surpasses 93% in urban areas and 70% in rural areas, the numbers for the Donovian republics in the Caucasus remain significantly less. Only 75% of Donovians who live in urban Caucasian cities can access modern sewage systems compared to about 60% of rural Donovians in the region. Even with “modern” sewage systems used in Donovia, only 8% of all waste water receives treatment before it reenters the country’s waterways.
 
 
 
== Transportation Architecture ==
 
Roads are the primary transportation method throughout the Caucasus region. Train and especially air travel remain too expensive for many residents of Ariana, Atropia, Gorgas, and Limaria. Most roads, especially the unpaved ones, suffer from a lack of maintenance. Ariana and Donovia maintain a complex transportation architectural system while the other three countries operate a moderate one due to railway system limitations.
 
 
 
=== Road Systems ===
 
[[File:Donovia’s Major Roads.png|thumb|Donovia's Major Roads]]
 
Overall, roads in this part of the world do not meet US or Western Europe standards. Driving is hazardous, especially in the winter months or in bad weather. Generally, drivers do not obey all traffic laws, and vehicle owners often fail to maintain their vehicles properly.
 
 
 
For a country its size, Donovia does not possess a large number of roads. In the past, the government did not emphasize privately owned vehicles, so the requirement for roads remained relatively low. The Donovians did not design most of their roads for heavy trucks, and extensive travel by semi- trailers  or other large trucks has significantly damaged the road system. The entire country contains approximately 510,186 miles of road broken down into 462,184 miles of paved roads and 108,002 miles of unpaved road. The paved roads include approximately 18,641 miles of expressways. Donovia built few expressways or paved roads in the Caucasus region, as most roads supported the large number of people who always lived in the northern part of the country. Donovia, for the most part, fails to maintain the roads in the Caucasus area, and vehicles travel at their own risk. Experts estimate that roads will gain importance in the Donovian economy from their 13% share of goods transported 10 years ago to 41% a decade into the future. To meet these requirements, the Donovian government allotted $10 billion for road construction, repair, and preventive maintenance last year, with subsequent annual increases. To pay for the roads, Donovia uses a combination of automobile taxes, a tariff on foreign-made car sales, and a charge for advertising alongside the roads.
 
 
 
=== Bus ===
 
All five countries maintain some sort of bus system, but its quality depends on the country and location. The larger the city, the more likely it will operate a public bus system. Usually, intercity buses run between the larger cities, and “private” buses may also operate in some areas. Due to the relatively cheap cost of public transportation, buses remain a favorite method for local civilians to travel long distances within their country.[[File:Donovia’s Major Railroads and Ports.png|alt=Donovia's Major Railroads and Ports|center|thumb|600x600px|Donovia's Major Railroads and Ports]]
 
Buses operate in almost every Donovian city of any size and provide means for poor people to travel to other cities and towns outside the large cities. In large cities, the vehicles may include buses, trolleybuses, or ''Marshrutkas''. Marshrutkas, or private buses, operate in many parts of Donovia, especially the Caucasus area. Most buses operate above normal capacity, especially during morning or afternoon rush hours. Sometimes a rider needs to purchase a ticket before boarding the bus while other times the rider purchases the ticket directly from the driver. If purchased from a driver, make sure to use the correct change or the driver may feign that he cannot make change or does not possess the proper change for the transaction. Do not purchase return tickets, because it does not save any money and a misunderstanding due to the language barrier may result in the purchase of the wrong return ticket.
 
 
 
=== Rail ===
 
All five Caucasus countries operate a railroad system, but they suffer many problems due to maintenance issues, non-standard equipment, criminal activity, and high cost.
 
 
 
Unlike many other European countries, Donovia uses its railroad system primarily to haul cargo and not passengers. Approximately 45,562 miles of broad-gauge track (5 foot) railroads cover Donovia from its western border east to Magnitogorsk and south through the Caucasus. Electricity runs 47% or 21,014 miles of this track. Donovian industries operate an additional 18,641 miles of non-common carrier tracks to support their businesses, but this represents a 45% decline from a high of 41,632 miles 20 years ago due to reduced economic activity. While the most famous railway line remains the Trans-Donovian Railroad that links western Donovia with eastern Donovia, railroad lines also spread to the Donovian ports on the Caspian and Black Seas.
 
 
 
Donovian Railways serves as the primary operator of the railroads in the country. Donovian Railways’ 950,000 employees operate 19,700 locomotives, 24,200 passenger cars, and 526,900 freight cars. Other private companies own an additional 270,000 freight cars. Five years ago, Donovian Railways bought 1,250 new locomotives while it phased out old train engines. Starting a decade ago, the Donovian government subsidized travel so that passengers only paid 15% of the actual cost. Only five years later, the government began a multi-year plan to phase out passenger subsidies that concluded earlier this year, much to the consternation of the people.
 
 
 
=== Air Transportation Systems ===
 
All five countries maintain both paved and unpaved runways of varying distances. Many of the unpaved runways resemble nothing more than a cleared dirt path only suitable for the sturdiest of planes.
 
 
 
Donovia enjoys 330 paved runways, with 17 over 10,000 feet in length. Of the 391 unpaved runways, only one reaches 10,000 feet in length.
 
 
 
==== Paved Runways ====
 
* Over 10,000 feet: 17
 
* 8,000 to 10,000 feet: 86
 
* 5,000 to 8,000 feet: 113
 
* 3,000 to 5,000 feet: 39
 
* Under 3,000 feet: 75
 
 
 
==== Unpaved Runways ====
 
* Over 10,000 feet: 1
 
* 8,000 to 10,000 feet: 6
 
* 5,000 to 8,000 feet: 61
 
* 3,000 to 5,000 feet: 34
 
* Under 3,000 feet: 289
 
 
 
==== Major Runways ====
 
* GRE= Graded Rolled Earth
 
 
 
* GRS=Non-graded Rolled Earth
 
* PEM=Porous European Mix
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
|'''Map #'''
 
|'''Elevation (Feet)'''
 
|'''Latitude (D,  M, S)'''
 
|'''Longitude (D,  M, S)'''
 
|'''Length (Feet)'''
 
|'''Width (Feet)'''
 
|'''Surface Type'''
 
 
|-
 
|-
|501
+
|Kola 3
|174
+
|Nuclear
|45 00 07.55 N
+
|441
|37 20 50.18 E
+
|67 28 00 N
|8202
+
|32 28 00 E
|138
+
|36WVV7719283502
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|502
+
|Kola 4
|<nowiki>-6</nowiki>
+
|Nuclear
|46 17 00.00 N
+
|441
|48 00 22.60 E
+
|67 28 00 N
|8202
+
|32 28 00 E
|138
+
|36WVV7719283502
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|503
+
|Kostromskaya
|735
+
|Natural Gas
|50 38 37.55 N
+
|3600
|36 35 24.45 E
+
|57 27 34 N
|7546
+
|41 10 30 E
|138
+
|37VFD3048070619
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|504
+
|Krasnoyarsk
|663
+
|Hydro
|53 12 51.10 N
+
|6000
|34 10 35.21 E
+
|56 56 05 N
|7874
+
|92 17 37 E
|138
+
|46VDJ5701310341
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|505-1
+
|Kirishskaya
|558
+
|Natural Gas
|56 05 24.97 N
+
|2595
|47 20 50.10 E
+
|59 29 26 N
|8241
+
|32 03 11 E
|161
+
|36VVL4637295059
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|505-2
+
|Konakovskaya
|558
+
|Natural Gas
|56 05 24.97 N
+
|2520
|47 20 50.10 E
+
|56 44 35 N
|4950
+
|36 46 13 E
|270
+
|37UCB5962467155
|GRE
 
 
|-
 
|-
|506
+
|Kulikovo
|742
+
|Wind
|55 18 21.01 N
+
|50.25
|61 30 12.00 E
+
|55 37 48 N
|10440
+
|63 395 36 E
|215
+
|42UWG3735765060
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|507-1
+
|Kursk 1
|499
+
|Nuclear
|46 22 26.16 N
+
|925
|44 19 51.14 E
+
|51 40 30 N
|7555
+
|35 36 20 E
|280
+
|36UXC8015028106
|GRE
 
 
|-
 
|-
|507-2
+
|Kursk 2
|499
+
|Nuclear
|46 22 26.16 N
+
|925
|44 19 51.14 E
+
|51 40 30 N
|6930
+
|35 36 20 E
|148
+
|36UXC8015028106
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|507-3
+
|Kursk 3
|499
+
|Nuclear
|46 22 26.16 N
+
|925
|44 19 51.14 E
+
|51 40 30 N
|6930
+
|35 36 20 E
|148
+
|36UXC8015028106
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|508-1
+
|Kursk 4
|118
+
|Nuclear
|45 02 04.88 N
+
|925
|39 10 13.94 E
+
|51 40 30 N
|9835
+
|35 36 20 E
|145
+
|36UXC8015028106
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|508-2
+
|Leningrad 3
|118
+
|Nuclear
|45 02 04.88 N
+
|925
|39 10 13.94 E
+
|59 50 50 N
|7218
+
|29 02 37 E
|160
+
|35VPG145013612
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|509
+
|Leningrad 4
|686
+
|Nuclear
|51 45 02.21 N
+
|925
|31 17 44.11 E
+
|59 50 50 N
|8202
+
|29 02 37 E
|131
+
|35VPG145013612
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|510-1
+
|Leningrad II 1
|13
+
|Nuclear
|42 49 00.56 N
+
|1085
|47 39 08.26 E
+
|59 50 50 N
|8688
+
|29 02 37 E
|230
+
|35VPG145013612
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|510-2
+
|Leningrad II 2
|13
+
|Nuclear
|42 49 00.56 N
+
|1085
|47 39 08.26 E
+
|59 50 50 N
|8661
+
|29 02 37 E
|138
+
|35VPG145013612
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|511
+
|Moscow TEC-27
|UNK
+
|Natural Gas
|44 39 12.00 N
+
|1060
|40 05 24.00 E
+
|55 54 57 N
|8579
+
|37 41 19 E
|UNK
+
|37UDB1803697489
|Dirt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|512
+
|Murmansk
|1054
+
|Wind
|44 13 30.26 N
+
|0.2
|43 04 54.80 E
+
|68 59 35 N
|12795
+
|33 07 06 E
|197
+
|36WWB0473453592
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|513-1
+
|Mutnovskaya
|587
+
|Geothermal
|55 24 31.63 N
+
|50
|37 54 22.73 E
+
|52 32 19 N
|12447
+
|158 12 06 E
|197
+
|57UVU4585421246
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|513-2
+
|Mendeleevskaya
|587
+
|Geothermal
|55 24 31.63 N
+
|1.8
|37 54 22.73 E
+
|44 07 00 N
|11483
+
|145 51 00 E
|230
+
|57UVU4585421246
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|514-1
+
|Nizhnekamsk
|630
+
|Hydro
|55 58 21.51 N
+
|1205
|37 24 52.52 E
+
|55 41 58 N
|12139
+
|52 16 42 E
|197
+
|39UWB8034273369
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|514-2
+
|Novovoronezk 4
|630
+
|Nuclear
|55 58 21.51 N
+
|385
|37 24 52.52 E
+
|51 16 30 N
|11647
+
|39 12 00 E
|197
+
|37UES1395080425
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|515-1
+
|Novovoronezk 5
|686
+
|Nuclear
|55 35 45.09 N
+
|950
|37 16 03.49 E
+
|51 16 30 N
|10039
+
|39 12 00 E
|197
+
|37UES1395080425
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|515-2
+
|Novovoronezk II 1
|686
+
|Nuclear
|55 35 45.09 N
+
|1114
|37 16 03.49 E
+
|51 16 30 N
|9842
+
|39 12 00 E
|197
+
|37UES1395080425
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|516
+
|Novovoronezk II 2
|1461
+
|Nuclear
|43 30 46.28 N
+
|1114
|43 38 11.70 E
+
|51 16 30 N
|7218
+
|39 12 00 E
|138
+
|37UES1395080425
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|517-1
+
|Okeanskaya
|643
+
|Geothermal
|55 33 52.87 N
+
|3.6
|52 05 33.04 E
+
|45 02 00 N
|8165
+
|147 37 00 E
|148
+
|55TEK4857486838
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|517-2
+
|Orenburg
|643
+
|Wind
|55 33 52.87 N
+
|1.0
|52 05 33.04 E
+
|51 46 60 N
|5620
+
|55 06 00 E
|190
+
|40UCC6894038647
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|518-1
+
|Pauzhetskaya
|256
+
|Geothermal
|56 13 48.43 N
+
|14.5
|43 47 02.55 E
+
|51 27 55 N
|9203
+
|156 48 42 E
|148
+
|47UUT4799403838
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|518-2
+
|Permskaya
|256
+
|Natural Gas
|56 13 48.43 N
+
|3363
|43 47 02.55 E
+
|58 29 53 N
|8232
+
|56 20 42 E
|148
+
|40VDK6182284348
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|518-3
+
|Priyutnenskaya
|256
+
|Wind
|56 13 48.43 N
+
|2.4
|43 47 02.55 E
+
|46 12 32 N
|1969
+
|46 12 32 N
|72
+
|38TNS9325317967
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|518-4
+
|Reftinskaya
|256
+
|Coal
|56 13 48.43 N
+
|3800
|43 47 02.55 E
+
|57 06 31 N
|1640
+
|61 42 27 E
|72
+
|41VMD2171430217
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|519
+
|Rostov 1
|387
+
|Nuclear
|51 47 44.83 N
+
|950
|55 27 24.28 E
+
|47 35 58 N
|8212
+
|42 22 19 E
|138
+
|38TLT0245275128
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|520-1
+
|Rostov 2
|909
+
|Nuclear
|51 04 22.13 N
+
|950
|58 35 45.71 E
+
|47 35 58 N
|9514
+
|42 22 19 E
|138
+
|38TLT0245275128
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|520-2
+
|Rostov 3
|909
+
|Nuclear
|51 04 22.13 N
+
|950
|58 35 45.71 E
+
|47 35 58 N
|5813
+
|42 22 19 E
|345
+
|38TLT0245275128
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|520-3
+
|Rostov 4
|909
+
|Nuclear
|51 04 22.13 N
+
|1011
|58 35 45.71 E
+
|47 35 58 N
|2311
+
|42 22 19 E
|172
+
|38TLT0245275128
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|520-4
+
|Rostove Wtg
|909
+
|Wind
|51 04 22.13 N
+
|0.3
|58 35 45.71 E
+
|57 12 00 N
|2018
+
|39 27 00 E
|195
+
|37VED2718939739
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|522
+
|Ryazan
|250
+
|Natural Gas/Coal
|62 09 30.86 N
+
|3130
|77 19 44.05 E
+
|54 02 04 N
|8925
+
|39 46 39 E
|195
+
|37UEV5092287633
|PEM
 
 
|-
 
|-
|523-1
+
|Saratov
|280
+
|Hydro
|47 15 29.51 N
+
|1404
|39 49 04.79 E
+
|52 03 11 N
|8202
+
|47 45 18 E
|148
+
|38UPC8889070521
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|523-2
+
|Sayano-Shushenskaya
|280
+
|Hydro
|47 15 29.51 N
+
|6400
|39 49 04.79 E
+
|52 49 33 N
|6381
+
|91 22 13 E
|205
+
|46UCD9019354140
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|523-3
+
|Shaturskaya
|280
+
|Peat/Coal/Oil/Natural Gas
|47 15 29.51 N
+
|1500
|39 49 04.79 E
+
|55 35 00 N
|4321
+
|39 33 40 E
|300
+
|37UEB3537059850
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|524-1
+
|Smolensk 1
|477
+
|Nuclear
|53 30 17.49 N
+
|925
|50 09 51.61 E
+
|54 10 08 N
|9846
+
|33 14 48 E
|148
+
|36UWF1610302340
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|524-2
+
|Smolensk 2
|477
+
|Nuclear
|53 30 17.49 N
+
|925
|50 09 51.61 E
+
|54 10 08 N
|8505
+
|33 14 48 E
|197
+
|36UWF1610302340
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|525
+
|Smolensk 3
|499
+
|Nuclear
|51 33 54.00 N
+
|925
|46 02 48.00 E
+
|54 10 08 N
|7485
+
|33 14 48 E
|138
+
|36UWF1610302340
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|526-1
+
|Stavropolskaya
|89
+
|Natural Gas
|43 26 59.74 N
+
|2423
|39 57 23.72 E
+
|45 18 45 N
|9482
+
|41 30 42 E
|164
+
|37TFL9687820735
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|526-2
+
|Surgut-1
|89
+
|Natural Gas
|43 26 59.74 N
+
|3268
|39 57 23.72 E
+
|61 16 46 N
|7218
+
|73 29 20 E
|161
+
|43VDH1899494850
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|528
+
|Surgut-2
|1486
+
|Natural Gas
|45 06 32.99 N
+
|5597
|42 06 46.00 E
+
|61 16 46 N
|8645
+
|73 30 45 E
|157
+
|43VDH1899494850
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|529
+
|Teusj
|469
+
|Wind
|54 49 29.05 N
+
|72
|35 45 27.64 E
+
|46 28 00 N
|8202
+
|38 19 00 E
|160
+
|37TDM4753446126
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|530-1
+
|Troitskaya
|449
+
|Coal
|54 33 27.04 N
+
|1315
|55 52 27.90 E
+
|54 02 13 N
|12339
+
|61 39 06 E
|197
+
|41UMV1169888473
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|530-2
+
|Tyupkeldy
|449
+
|Wind
|54 33 27.04 N
+
|2.5
|55 52 27.90 E
+
|54 36 00 N
|8245
+
|53 43 97 E
|164
+
|39UXA7722453741
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|530-3
+
|Ust-Ilimsk
|449
+
|Hydro
|54 33 27.04 N
+
|3840
|55 52 27.90 E
+
|57 58 04 N
|2360
+
|102 41 37 E
|325
+
|48VUK6356427451
|GRE
 
 
|-
 
|-
|530-4
+
|Verhne-Mutnovskaya
|449
+
|Geothermal
|54 33 27.04 N
+
|12
|55 52 27.90 E
+
|52 33 05 N
|2150
+
|158 14 16 E
|350
+
|57UVU4831822641
|GRE
 
 
|-
 
|-
|531
+
|Volga
|246
+
|Hydro
|54 24 03.66 N
+
|2660
|48 48 09.56 E
+
|48 49 34 N
|16490
+
|44 40 19 E
|310
+
|38UMV7592108177
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|532
+
|Votkinsk
|1673
+
|Hydro
|43 12 18.41 N
+
|1035
|44 36 23.91 E
+
|56 47 27 N
|9828
+
|54 05 22 E
|148
+
|40VCH2222997881
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|533-1
+
|Yktabivsj
|482
+
|Wind
|48 46 56.57 N
+
|50
|44 20 41.04 E
+
|54 19 00 N
|8202
+
|48 22 00 E
|161
+
|39UUA2871821953
|Asphalt
 
 
|-
 
|-
|533-2
+
|Zeya
|482
+
|Hydro
|48 46 56.57 N
+
|1330
|44 20 41.04 E
+
|53 46 09 N
|5575
+
|127 18 23 E
|295
+
|52UCE8837659170
|GRS
 
 
|-
 
|-
|534
+
|Zhiguli
|514
+
|Hydro
|51 48 51.16 N
+
|2456
|39 13 46.52 E
+
|53 25 36 N
|7546
+
|49 28 44 E
|161
+
|39UUV9893020812
|Concrete
 
 
|-
 
|-
|535
+
| colspan="6" |'''Legend''': MW: Megawatt      MGRS: Military Grid Reference System
|287
 
|57 33 38.40 N
 
|40 09 26.53 E
 
|9870
 
|135
 
|Concrete
 
 
|}
 
|}
[[File:Donovia’s Major Runways (Not All Shown).png|alt=Donovia's Major Runways (Not All Shown)|center|thumb|600x600px|Donovia's Major Runways (Not All Shown)]]
 
  
==== Airports/Airlines ====
+
===Home Heating ===
Donovia possesses over 650 airports, with the runways spread throughout the country. Most of the runways in the Caucasus serve dual purposes, as both civilian and military airplanes operate from them. Donovia operates nine major airports within 200 miles of its borders with Gorgas and Atropia.
+
Due to the size of Donovia, various methods of home heating are used. Practices found in urban Moscow will not be the same as rural Siberia. In most Donovian cities, the majority of buildings are centrally heated by hot water flowing through pipes heated by a local heat and power plant, usually one per neighborhood or district. The temperature is controlled at the central boiler plant rather than in the individual apartments as most urban dwellers do not live in houses. The heating season for European Donovia lasts from October until May, but cold weather can come earlier. The standard winter temperature for urban houses is about 64° (F), but could reach 75° (F) in the living room. Bathrooms are even warmer at 77° (F).   18 in the house, 25 in the bathroom, 24 in the living room
  
Donovian Airlines, the national airline, split up into a number of smaller airlines due to reforms enacted after the Four Traitors incident two decades ago. The Donovian government does not regulate the airlines, which leads to poor maintenance and some of the world’s worst airline safety records. Ground-based navigational aids remain limited and often inoperable due to maintenance issues. Airlines that fly to international designations, however, must meet specific safety regulations and remain the best travel option. When traveling within Donovia, the best choice remains an airplane headed afterward to an international destination. At least 163 different airlines operate in Donovia, and this includes Sophia Airlines and Anton Airlines, both headquartered in a Donovian Caucasus republic.
+
In rural Donovia, it is common for wood burning stoves to be used to heat the homes where more modern heating methods are not available. Placed in the center of the house, the stove is used for both heating and cooking. 
  
=== Maritime Seaports ===
+
==Water and Sanitation ==
With a population of over 150 million, international trade is a huge part of Donovia’s economy. Between January-August 2016, 468.6 million tons of cargo passed through Donovia’s ports – an increase of 5.7% compared with 2015’s volumes. In order to handle the sheer tonnage of trade turnover, Donovia’s Baltic, Arctic, Pacific and Black Sea coasts are dotted with world-class ports. Donovia’s (Caucasus coast) has 10 seaports located along the Black Sea and Sea of Azov. There are 8 Ariana ports that average more than 1 million tons of cargo throughput annually. The only port that can accommodate Military Sea Lift (MSC) Commands Large, Medium-Speed Roll-on/Roll-off (LMSR) is the Port of Novorossiysk. Donovia operates ports on the Caspian Sea, the Black Sea, and the Azov Sea. Ships can also negotiate many of Donovia’s rivers, especially in the non-winter months. Major Donovian Black and Azov Sea ports.  The Port of Novorossiyskt, located on the Black Sea, is Donovia’s leading center for exporting grain and its biggest port overall. To give a sense of the port’s scope, 85.5 million tons of freight passed through during January-August 2016. The Port of Novorossiysk boasts a total of 43 berths across its 959 thousand square meter site. Depths range from 4.5 meters to 24 meters. The Port offers 180 thousand square meters of open air storage space, with 62.2 thousand square meters of closed facilities and warehousing in order to keep cargo contained.  
+
===Water ===
 +
The vast majority of the Donovian urban population has access to potable water. As population density decreases in rural areas, people begin to rely less on public water systems, and more on local sources—rivers, streams, and wells—to obtain water for cooking, drinking, and washing.
  
[[File:Port of Novorossiyskt.png|center|thumb|480x480px|'''<big>Port of Novorossiyskt</big>''']]
+
Some NGO reports claim 100% of urban and 88% of rural Donovians can access safe drinking water. About 97% of Donovians may access potable water, but that number drops significantly outside of urban centers, particularly isolated rural areas. Donovian households use about 20% of all water in the country and agriculture uses about 14%, but the lion’s share of over 60% goes for industrial purposes. Even though most Donovian towns possess a water system, less than half of those public systems produce drinking water that meets international sanitary requirements. In rural areas, 59% of Donovians draw water from common wells, which are often contaminated by polluted groundwater.
Novorossiysk’s location allows access to the Black Sea and beyond. Transit routes link the port to Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, Asia and even South America. Economically, this is one of Donovia’s most important ports, as Donovia is the world’s biggest exporter of grain. Without the Port of Novorossiysk, it is unlikely Donovia would enjoy such a high agricultural profile. Donovia operates the 15th-largest merchant marine fleet in the world, with almost 900 vessels. This includes 507 cargo ships, 189 petroleum tankers, and 62 refrigerated cargo ships. Foreign corporations own 116 of the ships. Donovia registers almost 360 ships in foreign countries, with over 20% flagged in Liberia. Donovia operates the largest icebreaker fleet in the world. This includes six nuclear powered ships (with three under construction and two being planned) with Brake Horse Power (BHP) greater than 45,000. It operates 25 ships with BHP between 20,000-45,000; and another nine under construction. There are 15 with BHP of 10,000-20,000. This fleet is both government and commercial. Crews may be military or civilian.
 
  
Donovia’s (European coast) has 13 seaports located along the Baltic Sea and Barents Sea. There are 9 Donovian ports that average more than 1 million tons of cargo throughput annually. The only port that can accommodate Military Sea Lift Commands (MSC) Large, Medium-Speed Roll-on/Roll-off (LMSR) ships is the Port of St. Petersburg. Donovia operates ports on the Caspian Sea, the Black Sea, and the Azov Sea. Ships can also negotiate many of Donovia’s rivers, especially in the non-winter months. The two largest ports on Donovia’s European coast are the Port of Kaliningrad and the Port of St. Petersburg. Kaliningrad is the closest Russian port to Mainland Europe, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic coast. Comparative short distances between the Port of Kaliningrad and other major European ports, such as Copenhagen, Tallinn and Helsinki makes it unique amongst Russia’s Western sea ports. Even the drastically icy waters of the Barents Sea cannot slow down Donovia’s trade. The Port of Murmansk is an exemplar of Donovia’s ingenuity and tenacity. Located beyond the Arctic Circle, Murmansk sea port remains ice-free year round giving Northern Donovia’s a vital lifeline. The port itself is also one of Russia’s largest, in terms of cargo turnover 20 million tons passed through Murmansk over 2016’s first three quarters. 16 berths, the deepest of which holds maximum operative depth of 14.9 meters, serve the port.
+
===Sanitation ===
 +
The vast majority of Donovian urban residents use modern sewage disposal methods to get rid of waste. Urban residents have greater access to modern sewage treatment than rural residents. The more isolated a community is, the less likely it is that they will use modern sewage treatment techniques. Poor disposal methods in rural areas often contaminates ground water that is otherwise relied upon for drinking and cooking.
  
[[File:Port of St. Petersburg.png|center|thumb|624x624px|'''<big>Port of St. Petersburg</big>''']]
+
While the overall Donovian percentage for improved sanitation facilities surpasses 93% in urban areas and 70% in rural areas, the numbers for Donovians living in the Caucasus region are significantly lower. Only 75% of Donovians who live in urban Caucasian cities can access modern sewage systems, and 60% of rural Donovians in the region. Even with “modern” sewage systems used in Donovia, it is estimated that only 8% of all waste water receives treatment before it reenters the country’s waterways.
  
Facilities in the Port of St. Petersburg support commercial sea trade, an oil terminal, ship-building and repair, and passenger services. In addition to the Oktyabrskaya (October) Railway, the Port of St. Petersburg operates a fleet of more than 470 vessels that include 122 tugs, 13 ice breakers, and 66 tankers as well as pilotage boats, road boats, a fire vessel, and boats for oil garbage disposal, carrying water, and collecting bilge water. The Port of St. Petersburg accepts vessels to 320 meters (over one thousand feet) in length, to 42 (137.8 feet) meters in width, and with draft of up to 11 meters (36.1 feet). Even the drastically icy waters of the Barents Sea cannot slow down Donovia’s trade. The Port of Murmansk is an exemplar of Donovia’s ingenuity and tenacity. Located beyond the Arctic Circle, Murmansk sea port remains ice-free year round giving Northern Donovia’s a vital lifeline. The port itself is also one of Russia’s largest, in terms of cargo turnover 20 million tons passed through Murmansk over 2016’s first three quarters. 16 berths, the deepest of which holds maximum operative depth of 14.9 meters, serve the port.  
+
==Transportation Architecture ==
 +
Donovia has an extensive transportation network that stretches the length of the country, over 4,800 miles from the Baltic Sea in the west to the Kamchatka Peninsula in the east. Major cities are served by rapid transit systems. Roads are the primary transportation method throughout the country. Most roads, especially the unpaved ones, suffer from a lack of maintenance. Distances in Siberia are so great that trains or planes, for the wealthy, are a better alternative travel method.
 +
===Road System ===
 +
Donovia contains over 579,000 miles of roads. About 81% of these are paved, however, the maintenance on roads in the rural areas is not always completed. Rural roads, especially east of the Ural Mountains, are often little more than dirt paths. Of 144 countries evaluated for their road system, Donovia ranked in the bottom ten countries. Overall, roads in this part of the world do not meet US or Western Europe standards. Driving is hazardous, especially in the winter months or in bad weather. Generally, drivers do not obey all traffic laws, and vehicle owners often fail to maintain their vehicles properly. Donovia uses a combination of automobile taxes, a tariff on foreign-made car sales, and a charge for advertising alongside the roads to fund road construction and maintenance.
  
Donovia operates the 15th-largest merchant marine fleet in the world, with almost 900 vessels. This includes 507 cargo ships, 189 petroleum tankers, and 62 refrigerated cargo ships. Foreign corporations own 116 of the ships. Donovia registers almost 360 ships in foreign countries, with over 20% flagged in Liberia.  Donovia operates the largest icebreaker fleet in the world. This includes six nuclear powered ships (with three under construction and two being planned) with Brake Horse Power (BHP) greater than 45,000. It operates 25 ships with BHP between 20,000-45,000; and another nine under construction. There are 15 with BHP of 10,000-20,000. This fleet is both government and commercial. Crews may be military or civilian.
+
==== Donovian Major Roadways ====
  
[[File:Donovia Sea Port of Debarkation (SPOD) Infrastructure.png|thumb|1581x1581px|
+
=====Paved roads =====
Sources:  ''[https://msi.nga.mil/NGAPortal/MSI.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=msi_portal_page_62&pubCode=0015 World Port Index]'' ; [https://msi.nga.mil/NGAPortal/MSI.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=msi_portal_page_62&pubCode=0010 Sailing Directions Enroute] ; ''[https://msi.nga.mil/MSISiteContent/StaticFiles/NAV_PUBS/WPI/Pub150bk.pdf Pub: 150 (World Port Index) PDF].'' ; ''[https://www.searates.com/maritime/ SEARATES World Seaports]'' ; ''[http://www.worldportsource.com/countries.php World Port Source]'' ; ''[https://dlca.logcluster.org/display/public/DLCA/LCA+Homepage Logistics Capacity Assessments (LCAs)]'' ; ''[https://directories.lloydslist.com/port Lloyd's Maritime Intelligence]''
+
There are approximately 469,000 miles of paved roads in Donovia, most of these are west of the Ural Mountains. The further from the urban areas, the worse the roads become.
]]
 
.  
 
  
.  
+
=====Unpaved Roads =====
 +
There are approximately 90,000 miles of unpaved roads in Donovia. For a country its size, Donovia does not possess a large number of roads. In the past, the government did not emphasize privately owned vehicles, so the requirement for roads remained relatively low. The Donovians did not design most of their roads for heavy trucks, and extensive travel by semi- trailers or other large trucks has significantly damaged the road system. 
  
.  
+
=====Local Driving Habits =====
 +
Road safety in Donovia is poor, at best, with a high accident rate. Donovia consistently ranks in the top 5 countries in the absolute number of recorded road deaths despite the requirement for drivers to be able to answer 800 different questions to obtain a driver’s license. Drivers often obtain their license by bribing the test examiners. There is often no center line on roads so people drive in the middle. At stoplights, drivers jockey with each other like race car drivers to be the first one to take off once the light turns green. Speeding is common place. Drivers ignore pedestrians so walking on roads, especially in urban areas, is dangerous. The main reason is that law enforcement is quite lax due to budget restraints and legal issues involved in finding witnesses for some of the vehicular infractions. Another reason that if caught, the police will not issue a ticket for a small fee (bribe). 
  
.  
+
===Public Transportation ===
 +
Public transportation in Donovia is available, usually on time, and mostly user-friendly. Large cities used buses, subways, and trams to move people. In Moscow alone, there are 19 million public transportation trips on an average weekday. Seven Donovia cities (Kazan, Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Saint Petersburg, Samara, and Yekaterinburg) operate a subway system. Buses are operated locally not by a national entity. As such, some cities operate a more efficient system than others. There are long-distance bus service available in most large Donovian towns, but usually go no further than six hours away. After that, it is faster and cheaper to use a train.
  
.  
+
In smaller cities and in rural areas, transportation often comes in the form a marshrutka or a tax. It is actually a large van or minibus that has a specific route and ran by private companies. In some cities, these vehicles are part of the public system. The marshrutka will make scheduled stops in large and medium towns. In rural areas, people stand by the side of the road and flag them down.
 +
Donovian Rail and Port Map
 +
====Rail System ====
 +
Railroads are an important part of the Donovian transportation sector due to a lack of cars by people living in urban as well as rural areas. Over 800,000 people work in the direct railroad industry and create approximately 2.5% of the country’s GDP. In the last published year (5 years ago), over 1.3 billion passenger trips took place on any of the 17 regional railways and carried over 1.3 billion tons of freight accounting for 90% of all cargo (excluding pipelines).  
  
.  
+
The government owned Donovian Railways holds a near-monopoly with almost 99% of all passenger and freight traveling on over 80,000 miles of rails. About half the rail miles are electrified. The company operate almost 20,000 locomotives; 25,000 passenger cars; and 530,000 freight cars. Another 300,000 freight cars are privately owned, but travel on the national railroad’s track systems.
  
.  
+
In additional to these tracks, there are a number of industrial railways in the mining or lumber businesses whose total track length is about 40,000 mile. About 75% of these miles link to the Donovian Railways while the others are for internal use as a lumber company using its private railway line to transport logs from the forest to the sawmill. There are also a number of narrow-gauge railways throughout the country.
  
.  
+
Large cities usually have a subway system that is part of the metropolitan area’s rapid-transit system. The following charge provides details on these cities. Three other cities – Omsk, Chelyabinsk, and Krasnoyarsk – are currently building subway systems.
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
| colspan="4" |'''Donovian Metropolitan Area Rapid-Transit Systems'''
 +
|-
 +
|'''CITY & SYSTEM'''
 +
|'''LINES'''
 +
|'''STATIONS'''
 +
|'''MILES OF TRACK'''
 +
|-
 +
|Kazan Metro
 +
|1
 +
|10
 +
|9.8
 +
|-
 +
|Moscow Metro
 +
|13
 +
|207
 +
|217.2
 +
|-
 +
|Nizhny Novgorod Metro
 +
|2
 +
|14
 +
|11.7
 +
|-
 +
|Novosibirsk Metro
 +
|2
 +
|13
 +
|9.9
 +
|-
 +
|Saint Petersburg Metro
 +
|5
 +
|69
 +
|70.3
 +
|-
 +
|Samara Metro
 +
|1
 +
|10
 +
|7.9
 +
|-
 +
|Yekaterinburg Metro
 +
|1
 +
|9
 +
|7.9
 +
|}
  
.  
+
====Air Transportation System ====
 +
There are over 1,260 known runways in Donovia, but there are probably more. The vast expanse of Donovia (11 time zones) makes air travel an important for those that can afford it, especially east of the Urals where pockets of civilization are widely separated by vast wilderness. Donovia operates nine major airports within 200 miles of its borders with Gorgas and Atropia.
 +
Major Donovian Runways
 +
Paved Runways: 601
  
.
+
>10,000 feet: 51
  
.
+
8,000-10,000 feet: 197
  
.
+
5,000-8,000 feet: 129
  
.
+
3,000-5,000 feet: 102
  
.
+
3,000-5,000 feet: 122
  
.
+
Unpaved Runways: 659
  
.
+
>10,000 feet: 4
  
.
+
8,000-10,000 feet: 13
  
.
+
5,000-8,000 feet: 69
  
.
+
3,000-5,000 feet: 89
  
.
+
3,000-5,000 feet: 484
  
.  
+
==== // NEED AIRFIELDS (Currently five pages of color coded .xls) //[edit] ====
  
=== Pipelines ===
+
==Maritime ==
The security of hydrocarbon pipelines will be paramount in any military operations in the Caucasus region. Any disruption to the flow of crude oil and natural gas to the Western world could cause economic problems, as many modern countries rely on hydrocarbons to fuel their industries. Donovia’s Major Pipelines and Hydrocarbon Fields Due to its great hydrocarbon resources, Donovia uses a large number of pipelines throughout the country to include some that pass through the Caucasus to ports on the Black Sea. Due to their past relationship, Atropia can export oil through a pipeline that connects Baku with the Donovian pipeline
+
===Seaports ===
system. The vast network of pipelines means that the destruction of any one line would not likely damage Donovia’s ability to export hydrocarbon resources
+
{| class="wikitable"
to Western nations. While the cost may go up because a tanker or natural gas ship may need to travel a different route, Donovia possesses the means to
+
| colspan="3" |'''Largest Donovian Ports By Volume of Cargo Handled'''
divert its hydrocarbon resources through its pipeline system to where it needs to go.  
+
|-
 +
|'''CITY'''
 +
|'''LOCATION'''
 +
|'''TONNAGE'''
 +
|-
 +
|Novorossiysk
 +
|Black Sea (Caucasus)
 +
|141.8
 +
|-
 +
|Ust-Luga
 +
|Gulf of Finland (West Coast)
 +
|102.6
 +
|-
 +
|Vostochny
 +
|Inland (River Port)
 +
|77.4
 +
|-
 +
|St. Petersburg
 +
|Gulf of Finland (West Coast)
 +
|59.9
 +
|-
 +
|Murmansk
 +
|Barents Sea (West Coast)
 +
|56.1
 +
|-
 +
|Primorsk
 +
|Baltic Sea (West Coast)
 +
|49.3
 +
|-
 +
|Vanino
 +
|Strait of Tartary (East Coast)
 +
|33.5
 +
|-
 +
|Sabetta
 +
|Yamal Peninsula (Northern Sea Route
 +
|27.8
 +
|-
 +
|Nakhodka
 +
|Sea of Japan (East Coast)
 +
|26.8
 +
|-
 +
|Vladivostok
 +
|Sea of Japan (East Coast)
 +
|24.7
 +
|-
 +
|Taman
 +
|Taman Bay (Caucasus)
 +
|22.0
 +
|-
 +
|Kavkaz
 +
|Kerch Strait (Caucasus)
 +
|21.9
 +
|-
 +
|Vysotsk
 +
|Vyborg Bay (East Coast)
 +
|18.6
 +
|-
 +
|Rostov-on-Don
 +
|Inland (River Port)
 +
|17.8
 +
|-
 +
| colspan="3" |'''Tonnage is in million metric tons for last year on record'''
 +
|}
 +
With a population of over 150 million, international trade is a huge part of Donovia’s economy. Between January-August 2016, 468.6 million tons of cargo passed through Donovia’s ports – an increase of 5.7% compared with 2015’s volumes. In order to handle the sheer tonnage of trade turnover, Donovia’s Baltic, Arctic, Pacific and Black Sea coasts are dotted with world-class ports. 
 +
 
 +
Donovia operates the 15th-largest merchant marine fleet in the world, with almost 900 vessels. This includes 507 cargo ships, 189 petroleum tankers, and 62 refrigerated cargo ships. Foreign corporations own 116 of the ships. Donovia registers almost 360 ships in foreign countries, with over 20% flagged in Liberia. Donovia operates the largest icebreaker fleet in the world. This includes six nuclear powered ships (with three under construction and two being planned) with Brake Horse Power (BHP) greater than 45,000. It operates 25 ships with BHP between 20,000-45,000; and another nine under construction. There are 15 with BHP of 10,000-20,000. This fleet is both government and commercial. Crews may be military or civilian.
 +
 
 +
Donovia’s European coast has 13 seaports located along the Baltic Sea and Barents Sea. There are 9 Donovian ports on their west coast that average more than 1 million tons of cargo throughput annually. The only port for the west coast that can accommodate Military Sea Lift Commands (MSC) Large, Medium-Speed Roll-on/Roll-off (LMSR) ships is the Port of St. Petersburg. 
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The two largest ports on Donovia’s European coast are the Port of Kaliningrad and the Port of St. Petersburg. Kaliningrad is the closest Donovian port to Mainland Europe, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic coast. Comparative short distances between the Port of Kaliningrad and other major European ports, such as Copenhagen, Tallinn and Helsinki makes it unique amongst Donovia’s Western sea ports. Even the drastically icy waters of the Barents Sea cannot slow down Donovia’s trade. The Port of Murmansk is an exemplar of Donovia’s ingenuity and tenacity. Located beyond the Arctic Circle, Murmansk sea port remains ice-free year round giving Northern Donovia’s a vital lifeline. The port itself is also one of Donovia’s largest, in terms of cargo turnover 20 million tons passed through Murmansk over 2016’s first three quarters. 16 berths, the deepest of which holds maximum operative depth of 14.9 meters, serve the port.
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Facilities in the Port of St. Petersburg support commercial sea trade, an oil terminal, ship-building and repair, and passenger services. In addition to the Oktyabrskaya (October) Railway, the Port of St. Petersburg operates a fleet of more than 470 vessels that include 122 tugs, 13 ice breakers, and 66 tankers as well as pilotage boats, road boats, a fire vessel, and boats for oil garbage disposal, carrying water, and collecting bilge water. The Port of St. Petersburg accepts vessels to 320 meters (over one thousand feet) in length, to 42 (137.8 feet) meters in width, and with draft of up to 11 meters (36.1 feet). Even the drastically icy waters of the Barents Sea cannot slow down Donovia’s trade. The Port of Murmansk is an exemplar of Donovia’s ingenuity and tenacity. Located beyond the Arctic Circle, Murmansk sea port remains ice-free year round giving Northern Donovia’s a vital lifeline. The port itself is also one of Donovia's largest, in terms of cargo turnover 20 million tons passed through Murmansk over 2016’s first three quarters. 16 berths, the deepest of which holds maximum operative depth of 14.9 meters, serve the port. 
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Donovia has 10 seaports located along the Black Sea and Sea of Azov. The only port for those two bodies of water that can accommodate Military Sea Lift (MSC) Commands Large, Medium-Speed Roll-on/Roll-off (LMSR) is the Port of Novorossiysk. Donovia operates ports on the Caspian Sea, the Black Sea, and the Azov Sea. Novorossiysk’s location allows access to the Black Sea and beyond. Transit routes link the port to Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, Asia and even South America. Economically, this is one of Donovia’s most important ports, as Donovia is the world’s biggest exporter of grain. Without the Port of Novorossiysk, it is unlikely Donovia would enjoy such a high agricultural profile. 
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Donovia has a large number of seaports on the Pacific Ocean, often in protected bays or the mouths of rivers. A number of other seaports are located on the islands off the Donovian east coast. Many of these seaports provide vital supplies for the local area that is based on the extraction of mineral, trees, or other natural products in the vastness of Siberia. Many of the ports on the east coast also accommodate the tourist trade providing a place for cruise ships to dock.
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==== // Need List of Major Ports (Currently 9 pages of .xls)//[edit] ====
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===Navigable Rivers ===
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Ships can also negotiate many of Donovia’s rivers, especially in the non-winter months. Cargo ships travel inland to reach ports that provide the access to Donovia’s vast mineral and natural resources to ship raw materials overseas. The ships also bring in finished products to be used by the locals. The tourism trade on these rivers have increased over the last decade with some ocean cruise ships going inland on the waterways. Smaller tourist ships operate on some of the waterways further inland.
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 +
==Pipelines ==
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There are 2,175,000 miles of pipelines in 120 countries around the world. The United States ranks first with 65% of these pipelines. Donovia ranks second at only 8% of the pipelines, but amounts to 161,502 miles of pipelines. Pipelines transport fluids including crude oil, refined petroleum, other fuels, water, sewage, and even beer. Large number of pipelines run through Donovia, especially to the west of the Ural Mountains. There are fewer pipelines east of the Ural Mountains and most of them are used to transport oil and natural gas from the production fields to a port where the hydrocarbon products are loaded onto ships for transfer to other countries. 
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Donovian Hydrocarbon Pipeline Map
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===Petroleum ===
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Most of Donovia’s pipelines move petroleum from the three largest oil producing areas in Donovia and smaller fields to either refineries or transport the crude oil to other countries or the ports where the crude is loaded onto tankers for shipment to other countries. The first petroleum producing area is centered in the vicinity of Surgut near the Ural Mountains. The second, but lesser field, is in Siberia north of Irkoutsk. The third is offshore in the Pacific in the Okhotsk Sea. Smaller oil fields are southwest of Perm and northwest of Ukhta.
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Donovia is in the midst of building even more petroleum pipelines. Many of the pipelines move oil to Europe through Pirtuni. In the last two years, Donovia completed a new petroleum pipeline that takes a seaborne route to Western Europe bypassing Pirtuni as the two countries have had a long history of animosity between each other. Donovia recently completed a new petroleum pipeline to Olvana and is currently building yet another one. As Olvana continues to modernize its entire country, it needs more hydrocarbon products. Donovia has been more than willing to provide the petroleum to fuel Olvanawa’s growing economy.
  
European consortiums are constructing new hydrocarbon pipelines that will
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===Natural Gas ===
allow the Central Asian countries to avoid Donovia; these could threaten Donovia financially with a massive loss of transit fees. New oil and gas pipelines will originate in Central Asia,cross the Caspian Sea, and then follow the current Trans-Caucasus petroleum (TC-P) and natural gas (TC-G) pipelines through Atropia and Gorgas before reaching the European market. These new pipelines, called TransCaucasus 2 (TC2-P and TC2-G), will double the export capacity of the original pipelines to help satisfy the increased demand for oil and natural gas by Western Europe.
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Normally, natural gas and petroleum are located in the same vicinity. This is true in Donovia. All three petroleum producing areas also contain natural gas deposits, but the size of the fields are much bigger. There are also natural gas fields in Arctic Ocean and the Donovian Caucasus regions that contribute to making Donovia the world’s largest possessor of proven natural gas reserves. 
[[File:Donovia’s Major Pipelines and Hydrocarbon Fields.png|alt=Donovia's Major Pipelines and Hydrocarbon Fields|center|thumb|600x600px|Donovia's Major Pipelines and Hydrocarbon Fields]]
 
  
== Telecommunications Architecture ==
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Many of the natural gas pipelines follow the same paths as the petroleum pipelines as the customers are often the same countries. Donovian natural gas pipelines flow through Pirtuni to Western Europe, directly to Olvana, and to ports where the gas is cooled to -160° converting it to LNG (liquid natural gas). The cooling allows the ship to take on 600 times more natural gas.
For the most part, Caucasus-region residents use cellular telephones to communicate with each other due to the lack of landline telephone infrastructure. Many residents never owned any type of telephone until they received their first cellular phone. Most can access news from either television or radio, but some rural residents have no information access via modern methods. (''See Information variable for additional details.'')
 
  
Donovians use over five times as many cellular telephones as landlines, and the number of cellular telephones continues to increase as it becomes the primary means of communication throughout the country. Donovians possess over 155 million cellular telephones, but only 30 million landlines. The Donovian government licenses over 700 companies to offer communications services. In the Caucasus area, like the rest of Donovia, cellular telephones provide the primary means for the residents to communicate with each other.
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===Water ===
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The vast majority of water pipelines in Donovian are local. These pipelines, almost always in urban areas, transport clean water from treatment plants to homes and apartments. In rural areas, most people obtain their water from wells. 
  
Approximately 32% or 26.5 million of the 82 million Donovians can access the Internet on a regular basis. The actual percent for Donovians in the Caucasus, however, hovers closer to 15%. Approximately 670,000 Internet hosts operate in Donovia, but most of them work out of Moscow and other Donovian cities north of the Caucasus.
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==Telecommunications Architecture ==
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For the most part, Donovians use cellular telephones to communicate with each other due to the lack of landline telephone infrastructure. Many residents never owned any type of telephone until they received their first cellular phone. The majority can access news from either television or radio, but some rural residents have no information access via modern methods. (See Information variable for additional details.)
  
Over 2,200 national, regional, and local television stations operate in Donovia, with approximately two-thirds under control or partial control by the government. Of the 12 national television stations, the federal government owns one and holds the majority of shares in a second while a bank owns two more, the major hydrocarbon company the fifth, and the Moscow city government the sixth. Within Donovia, around 1,400 public and commercial radio stations operate. Due to the number of television and radio stations under its control, the Donovian government still attempts to control what information the Donovian people receive. Despite these attempts, all Donovians to include those in the Caucasus now receive more information due to the inability of the government to control information via the Internet or telephone systems.
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There are more cell phones (200 million) than people (150 million) in Donovia. Donovians use over four times as many cellular telephones as landlines (50 million), and the number of cellular telephones continues to increase as it becomes the primary means of communication throughout the country. The Donovian government licenses over 700 companies to offer communications services. 
  
== Industry ==
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Despite this focus on cellular communication, coverage can be inconsistent, particularly in rural areas. Travelers east of the Ural Mountains, are often advised to get two different sim cards for their phones in order to double their chances of being able to obtain reception. 
Because of their hydrocarbon resources, Ariana, Atropia, and Donovia are more industrialized than Gorgas and Limaria. Industry GDP ranges from a low of 27.1% in Gorgas to a high of 61.4% in Atropia. The protection of the hydrocarbon infrastructure remains paramount for any military operations in the area, and the military should refrain from unnecessary damage to the industrial sector to facilitate economic recovery after the end of hostilities.
 
  
While Donovia possesses a large industrial base—with 42% of the population generating 54% of the country’s GDP, this industrial production does not carry over the Caucasus. While some industrialization took place in the Caucasus after World War II, the area did not modernize as much as other parts of Donovia to the north. Because of this lack of industrialization, the Donovian Caucasus region has much more in common with its neighbors to the south than with its own country.
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There are over 14 million Internet hosts operate in Donovia, but most of them work out of Moscow and other Donovian cities north of the Caucasus and west of the Ural Mountains.
  
Each of the Donovian Caucasus republics relies on different industrial products. Gilan produces natural gas for domestic consumption, oil, chemicals, textiles, and some metalworking industries. Barbodrag relies on the timber industry, heavy engineering plants, and metalworking. Armavir’s primary products include chemicals, timber, and processed foods. North Ostremek relies mainly on timber, mining, and agricultural food processing. Before Gamrun began fighting a series of wars with the national government over local authority issues, oil had served as the republic’s primary industry. Badgir industry focuses on oil, gas, mining, and to a lesser extent on mineral water. Overall, Donovia produces a large amount of toxic industrial chemicals for multiple purposes, including hydrocarbon production activities, water purification, and fertilizer to increase agricultural output.
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Approximately 80% of all Donovians watch one of the over 3,300 national, regional, and local television stations that operate in Donovia. Approximately one percent of the stations are under control or partial control by the government. The other stations, however, must ensure they do not do anything that may cause their license to be pulled by the government. Of the 12 national television stations, the federal government owns one and holds the majority of shares in a second while a bank owns two more, the major hydrocarbon company the fifth, and the Moscow city government the sixth. 
  
Donovia is a major producer of military equipment for its own military. It also produces military equipment for export and sells outdated and excess equipment no longer used by its own military. The Donovian military industrial complex produces naval ships, airplanes, and ground-based vehicles. The country also produces radar equipment, telecommunication devices, and electronic warfare systems, as well as arms and ammunition. Donovian companies can overhaul both their own military equipment and that of neighboring countries if needed. The country’s aerospace enterprises also produce missiles and rockets for both military and civilian use.
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Within Donovia, around 650 public and commercial radio stations operate. Due to the number of television and radio stations under its control, the Donovian government still attempts to control what information the Donovian people receive. Despite these attempts, all Donovians now receive more information due to the inability of the government to control information via the Internet or telephone systems.
  
=== Agriculture ===
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==Industry ==
Agriculture production still dominates the labor forces of Gorgas (55.6%) and Limaria (46.2%), but not Ariana (25%), Atropia (38.3%), or Donovia (20%). Even in the Caucasus region’s predominately agricultural countries, farming creates less than one-fourth of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Except for Atropia, the region relies on food imports to feed its people. Any food import disruption may increase the military’s burden to feed civilians and prevent starvation.
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Because of its hydrocarbon resources, Donovia is a very industrialized country. The protection of the hydrocarbon infrastructure remains paramount for Donovia to ensure the continual flow of funds to the government coffers.
  
Due primarily to its vast natural resources and poor climate in many parts of the vast country, agriculture plays a lesser role in Donovia. Approximately 20% of Donovians farm or work in farm- related occupations, but agriculture creates only 4% of the country’s GDP.
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While Donovia possesses a large industrial base—with 42% of the population generating 54% of the country’s GDP, this industrial production does not carry over the Caucasus region. Most of this industrial production is in northern Donovia, west of the Ural Mountains. There are small places in Siberia where there may be some industrial output, but it is primarily concerned with the extraction of hydrocarbon products and the shipment of the raw materials to market. 
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===Food and Agriculture ===
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Agriculture accounts for 20% of Donovia’s workforce (20%). Due primarily to its vast natural resources and poor climate in many parts of the vast country, agriculture plays a lesser role in some parts of Donovia. Agriculture creates only 4% of the country’s GDP.
  
 
Only about 12% of Donovia’s land possesses topography, soil, and climate to make it suitable for cultivation. Donovian farmers use about 60% of their fields for crops with the remainder for pasture and meadows. Major Donovian agricultural crops include grains, soybeans, sugar beets, sunflower seeds, vegetables, fruits, beef, and milk. Wheat accounts for 50% of all Donovian grain production, while corn accounts for 20% and barley with just a slightly higher total. Donovia uses 70% of its wheat in products for people while 30% goes to feed animals. Almost all barley goes for animal feed or to make beer. The Donovian farmers use over 60% of their corn for animal feed. Due to its low production cost relative to wheat and a high demand, sunflowers to make into oil usually turn the highest profit for Donovian farmers. Flax is grown for both textiles and linseed oil. In the Caucasus, the most important agricultural products include grain, sunflowers, tea, dairy products, cattle, poultry, and wine production.
 
Only about 12% of Donovia’s land possesses topography, soil, and climate to make it suitable for cultivation. Donovian farmers use about 60% of their fields for crops with the remainder for pasture and meadows. Major Donovian agricultural crops include grains, soybeans, sugar beets, sunflower seeds, vegetables, fruits, beef, and milk. Wheat accounts for 50% of all Donovian grain production, while corn accounts for 20% and barley with just a slightly higher total. Donovia uses 70% of its wheat in products for people while 30% goes to feed animals. Almost all barley goes for animal feed or to make beer. The Donovian farmers use over 60% of their corn for animal feed. Due to its low production cost relative to wheat and a high demand, sunflowers to make into oil usually turn the highest profit for Donovian farmers. Flax is grown for both textiles and linseed oil. In the Caucasus, the most important agricultural products include grain, sunflowers, tea, dairy products, cattle, poultry, and wine production.
  
The Caucasus, like many other parts of Donovia, uses a winter-crop planting system. Farmers sow their crops beginning in August in the north and, moving southward, conclude in the Caucasus in late October. In April, farmers plant their summer crops such as corn and sunflowers, with completion not later than early June. Harvest for winter crops begins in late June in the Caucasus and moves northward to finish not later than the end of August. These farmers then harvest their corn and sunflower crops in September and finish by October. Many farmers in the Caucasus employ a six-year crop rotation with two years of winter wheat, one year of sunflowers, one year of spring barley, one year of corn, and a fallow year. Other farmers use a seven-year crop rotation plan with two years of winter wheat, four years of perennial forage such as alfalfa, and a fallow year. Farmers can usually get four cuttings of alfalfa in any given year and sometimes five in an irrigated field. Wheat always follows a fallow year due to the need for additional moisture for the crop. In some parts of the Caucasus, farmers omit the fallow year and use an eight-year crop rotation plan with winter wheat, winter barley, sugar beets, winter wheat, winter barley, sunflowers, corn, and finally sugar beets and/or sunflowers.
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In areas that don’t have a harsh winter, such as the lowland Caucasus territories, often plant summer and winter crops, taking advantage of mild winters to increase their crop yield. Farmers who sow winter crops typically begin in August, but it is not unusual for farmers in southern regions to plant as late as October. In April, farmers plant their summer crops such as corn and sunflowers, with completion not later than early June. Harvest for winter crops begins in late June in the Caucasus and moves northward to finish not later than the end of August. These farmers then harvest their corn and sunflower crops in September and finish by October. Many farmers in the Caucasus employ a six-year crop rotation with two years of winter wheat, one year of sunflowers, one year of spring barley, one year of corn, and a fallow year. Other farmers use a seven-year crop rotation plan with two years of winter wheat, four years of perennial forage such as alfalfa, and a fallow year. Farmers can usually get four cuttings of alfalfa in any given year and sometimes five in an irrigated field. Wheat always follows a fallow year due to the need for additional moisture for the crop. In some parts of the Caucasus, farmers omit the fallow year and use an eight-year crop rotation plan with winter wheat, winter barley, sugar beets, winter wheat, winter barley, sunflowers, corn, and finally sugar beets and/or sunflowers.
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There are three different types of farms found in Donovia, generally speaking, large corporate farms, small household farms that provide subsistence to rural families, and cooperative farms. 
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===Oil/Gas ===
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Donovia is one of the world’s largest exporter of hydrocarbon products. More specifically, it exports crude oil and natural gas to other countries. Some of the raw products remain behind in Donovia to be converted to gasoline and other products.
  
Donovia operates three different types of farms: large corporate farms, small household farms that provide subsistence to rural families, and cooperative farms. After the Four Traitors incident, peasant farms began to increase as economic conditions worsened. Donovian agricultural output declined annually by 5% in crops and 11% in livestock for four years, culminating in the worst grain harvest since 1963. Since then, farm production has begun to rise again under the free market system. Recent data concludes that household and cooperative farms produce 59% of all Donovian agricultural output, but only use 20% of all land under cultivation.
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Donovia ranks eighth in the world in proven oil reserves and first in natural gas as estimated by the United States Energy Information Administration. The country will remain a major player in the hydrocarbon industry for decades. Many of these oil and natural gas fields are in Siberia, east of the Ural Mountains. Some of the gas fields are located in the Arctic Sea so climate change could actually allow Donovia to access some of these fields more easily and for longer periods of time. Some of these fields cannot be easily accessed in the winter so while Donovia has the raw hydrocarbon products, it is not always able to transport the commodity to the market.
  
=== Nuclear ===
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===Defense Infrastructure ===
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Donovia is a major producer of military equipment for its own military. It also produces military equipment for export and sells outdated and excess equipment no longer used by its own military. The Donovian military industrial complex produces naval ships, airplanes, and ground-based vehicles. The country also produces radar equipment, telecommunication devices, and electronic warfare systems, as well as arms and ammunition. Donovian companies can overhaul both their own military equipment and that of neighboring countries if needed. The country’s aerospace enterprises also produce missiles and rockets for both military and civilian use.
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===Nuclear Facilities ===
 
Donovia became the second country after the United States to produce a nuclear weapon in 1951, primarily through scientists kidnapped from Western Europe in the mid-1940s. Donovia is a signatory country to all the nuclear weapons treaties that attempt to reduce the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction to other countries.
 
Donovia became the second country after the United States to produce a nuclear weapon in 1951, primarily through scientists kidnapped from Western Europe in the mid-1940s. Donovia is a signatory country to all the nuclear weapons treaties that attempt to reduce the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction to other countries.
  
While Donovia continues to maintain a nuclear weapon arsenal, most of its work is now devoted to nuclear power production. The country currently has 31 nuclear power plants that produce electricity for the country. With a 30-year life expectancy for most nuclear reactors, Donovia is in the process of building 10 additional reactors—all at current nuclear power plant sites. See the Power section in this variable for more details on the locations of the nuclear power plants.
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While Donovia continues to maintain a nuclear weapon arsenal, most of its work is now devoted to nuclear power production. The country currently has 31 nuclear power plants that produce electricity for the country. With a 30-year life expectancy for most nuclear reactors, Donovia is in the process of building 10 additional reactors—all at current nuclear power plant sites. See the Power section in this variable for more details on the locations of the nuclear power plants.
  
=== Space ===
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===Space ===
 
The Donovian government has an established national space program that exemplifies its technological superiority over other countries in the region. It maintains access to systems with dual- use technologies such as satellite-based communications, earth observation/remote sensing, and scientific experiments.
 
The Donovian government has an established national space program that exemplifies its technological superiority over other countries in the region. It maintains access to systems with dual- use technologies such as satellite-based communications, earth observation/remote sensing, and scientific experiments.
  
The Donovian Space Command, the government organization with primary responsibility for space operations, maintains a variety of current operational and developmental launchers and payloads. The Donovians have placed a variety of payloads into orbit, including systems with communications, photographic, and scientific missions. The facility Donovia uses to launch these satellite systems is located just east of Volgograd. The facility is referred to as the ''Satellite Research Center'' and has been a site for Donovian space launches and development for decades. The site covers a large area, four kilometers by one and a half kilometers, and contains approximately 19 different pads dedicated to satellite and missile launches.
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The Donovian Space Command, the government organization with primary responsibility for space operations, maintains a variety of current operational and developmental launchers and payloads. The Donovians have placed a variety of payloads into orbit, including systems with communications, photographic, and scientific missions. The facility Donovia uses to launch these satellite systems is located just east of Volgograd. The facility is referred to as the Satellite Research Center and has been a site for Donovian space launches and development for decades. The site covers a large area, four kilometers by one and a half kilometers, and contains approximately 19 different pads dedicated to satellite and missile launches.
 
 
== Pollution ==
 
All five Caucasus-region countries face significant pollution problems stemming from poor industrial practices. The governments cared more about natural resource extraction and industrial production than the stewardship of the planet. This lack of concern for the environment occurred regardless of which government was in power. The region’s military operations will need to address pollution, with soldiers taking precautions due to high-level air pollution and units considering any local water source not potable until tested.
 
 
 
Donovia faces pollution issues throughout the entire country, and the Caucasus region does not differ from the country’s norm. Pollution contaminates over 75% of all Donovian surface water and 30% of all groundwater. Donovia’s worst problems include much of the Caucasus region. Because it lacks facilities, Donovia only treats 8% of its sewage before it rejoins the country’s streams and rivers. Poor industrial methods produce chemicals that contaminate many areas. Cases of cholera, salmonella, typhoid fever, dysentery, and viral hepatitis break out due to poor sanitation methods. Water runoff from fields and industrial plants continues to kill much of the aquatic life in Donovia. The pollution allows only five species of fish to survive in the Black Sea where once 26 different species thrived. Pollution has wiped out the fishing industry in the Black Sea, with fish yields dropping 93% in the first eight years after the Four Traitors incident. To clean up all of Donovia’s pollution from years of neglect is too expensive to even consider. Even if Donovia began to clean up the pollution, the Caucasus would likely receive a low priority compared to other parts of the country that the Donovian government deems most important.
 
  
== Summary ==
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Donovia and Ariana contain the best infrastructure of the five countries in this OEA. The modern infrastructure, however, exists in Donovia’s larger cities that mainly appear outside the Caucasus area. For the Donovian Caucasus area, the infrastructure resembles that of Atropia, Gorgas, and Limaria more than that of Donovia’s largest cities in the northern part of the country. Much of the infrastructure in the Donovian Caucasus area receives little maintenance or is neglected and subjects the people living there to intermittent interruptions of power, water, and sewage disposal. For all the wealth generated by Donovia’s natural resources, the Donovian government in Moscow continues to spend its resources in areas of the country other than the Caucasus.
 

Latest revision as of 19:12, 29 September 2022


DATE Caucasus > Donovia > Infrastructure: Donovia ←You are here


INFRASTRUCTURE OVERVIEW//PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION//

Donovian infrastructure is a mixed bag ranging from the use of the latest equipment, products, and technology in the largest cities such as Moscow to isolated rural areas where the infrastructure is little changed from what it was in the nineteenth century. Over the next decade, the Donovian government plans to spend a lot of its GDP towards revamping its infrastructure, especially in the transportation arena. Primarily for economic reasons, the Donovians plan on upgrading their highways, airports, railways, ports, and other infrastructure.

There are parts of the country, especially east of the Ural Mountains, which communities are isolated and can only be reached by air or by back country roads that can turn into quagmires when it rains. Despite the country’s size, Donovia is one of the world’s most urbanized countries. About 75% of all Donovians live in urban areas. The capital city of Moscow is the most populous city in Europe and one of the largest in the world with 12.4 million within the city limits and a metropolitan population of over 20 million.

While Donovia features a large urban population, the urbanization rate has actually dropped 0.2% over the last decade as the population ages and the elderly cannot no longer survive in the cities due to the cost of living. They are moving back to their rural homes where they grew up so they supplement whatever pension they may receive with gardening to provide themselves necessary food for survival.

Major Cities and Urban Zones

Infrastructure Matrix

The table below shows the information for Donovia’s five largest cities and for three largest cities in the Caucasus region. The population figures are for the city itself and not the metropolitan area.

Infrastructure Sub-Variables
City Pop Pop Dens/km2 UBD Roads Air Rail Sea Power Water Sewage/

Sanitation

Moscow 12.5 million 4,880 H C C C C Dv Dv Dv
St. Petersburg 5.4 million 3,750 H C C C C Dv Dv Dv
Novosibirsk 1.6 million 3,180 H C C C C Dv Dv Dv
Yekaterinburg 1.5 million 3,030 H C C C P Dv Dv Dv
Kazan 1.3 million 3,060 H C C C M Dv Dv Dv
Makhachkala (25) 600,000 1,280 H M M M M Dg Dg Dg
Grozny (58) 325,000 1,000 H M M M M Dg Dg Dg
Nalchik (82) 240,000 3,580 H M M M N Dg Dg Dg
Legend: Population (Pop); Density (Dens); kilometer (km)

Per TC-7-101: UBD = Urban Building Density: low (L); medium (M); high (H)

                        Transportation (Roads, Air, Rail, Sea): primitive (P); moderate (M); complex (C)

                        Utilities: non-existent (NE); degraded (Dg); developed (Dv)                             N: None

Moscow

Moscow is a megacity with over 12.5 million inhabitants within the city limits and almost 20 million in the metropolitan area located on the Moskva River in Central Donovia. It is Europe’s largest city and the world’s sixth most populous urban center, and serves as the political, economic, cultural, scientific, religious, financial, educational, and transportation center for Donovia. Moscow continues to grow steadily while many other smaller Donovian cities continue to shrink.  Moscow’s history dates back to the 12th century and owes its prominence to its strategic location on the Moscow River. Due to its position as the country’s capital city, Moscow contains all the urban zones—city core, core periphery, high-rise residential areas, low- rise residential areas, commercial areas, industrial areas, and strictly military areas. The Donovian central government, however, razed many of the older buildings in the oldest parts of town and replaced them with more modern structures. While some small areas with dense random  construction do occur in older parts of the city, most of Moscow features closed, orderly block construction that may not always conform to square blocks. Strip areas occur along the Moscow River with limited shantytowns, as the Donovian government attempts to make Moscow appear attractive to the outside visitor. Even though Moscow serves as Donovia’s largest urban area, residents and visitors can partake in the city’s 170 square miles of green space. Moscow contains four botanical gardens, 18 smaller gardens, and 96 parks along with 39 square miles of forest in the metropolitan area. While Moscow could provide ample support to any military with its large number of resources, control of the city by the military may prove impossible through force alone.

Saint Petersburg

This city over 5.4 million inhabitants is the historic and cultural center of the original Donovian Empire located on the Baltic Sea. It has a number of historic landmarks that are on the UNESCO World Heritage Site list. Saint Petersburg is also an economic center for Donovia, especially in the import and export trade through its large port. The city contains all four types of construction patterns (dense, random construction; closed orderly block construction; strip areas; and shantytowns), but the number of shantytowns is low in contract to other large Donovian cities. Saint Petersburg contains all seven urban zones. The city core contains a large number of government buildings, businesses, and then shops that support the workers such as restaurants and cafes. Building out from the city center, there are core periphery, high-rise residential, and low-rise residential areas. Commercial areas abound throughout the city to support the large population. Saint Petersburg is a major trading hub for Donovia. Areas of specialization include the hydrocarbon field, shipbuilding, aerospace, technology, transportation, chemicals, and even textiles. Many of these companies are in the industrial heart of the city along the waterfront. There are even designated military areas around Saint Petersburg meaning that all types of urban zones can be found.

Novosibrisk

This city of 1.6 million is an administrative center for the region located in southwestern Siberia on the banks of the Ob River. It grew into a transportation, commercial, and industrial hub because it was the starting point for the original Trans-Siberian Railway and the site of the original railway bridge that crossed the Ob River. Novosibirsk is the home to numerous Donovian corporations, the busiest airport in Siberia, and a thriving cultural community. Most of the city has been built since about 1890 and contains all four construction patterns and seven urban zones. The city core while it began haphazardly, it is more of an organized area now when central planning began in the 1920s. The core periphery dates back to the city’s buildup in the 1890s, but some urban improvements have occurred in the last thirty years. The high-rise residential areas date back to the mid-20th century while the areas with low-rise residential areas are slightly newer. Many corporations have factories including several food companies in the industrial areas. Military training areas exist in the region.

Yekaterinburg

This city of 1.5 million inhabitants with 2.2 million in the metropolitan area is the largest city and the administrative center for its district. Yekaterinburg is sometimes called the “third capital of Donovia” as it normally ranks third in its economic might, culture, transportation, and tourism. The city was founded in 1723 and was original a mining capital while connecting European Donovia to Asian Donovia. Like the other large Donovian cities, Yekaterinburg contains all four construction patterns and seven urban zones. The military has a slightly bigger footprint due to its traditional role dating back at least two centuries. The city core began 300 years ago so it is dense, random construction. Urban renewal in the 20th century eliminated some of the old housing so there are sections that contain closed orderly block construction. The core periphery contains a large number of older buildings; many one or two centuries old. The high-rise residential areas are usually older than the low-rise residential areas. Despite the large number of manufacturing businesses in the city, there is also a large amount of green space and even four large lakes.

Kazan

Over 1.3 million residents live in the capital and the largest city of Tatarstan. Kazan is located where the Volga and Kazanka rivers merge and has been a city since the late 13th century. Kazan has served as a major industrial, cultural, and religious center for Donovia for the past 600 years. The city is also important for education and commerce. Due to the city’s age, the urban core was originally dense, random construction. Urban renewal projects in the 20th century converted some of the city center to a more orderly block construction amid new government offices. With all four construction patterns and all seven urban zones, Kazan is similar to other Donovian cities. On the outskirts of the city core rises the core periphery followed by areas of the city with either high-rise or low-rise residential areas. Usually the low-rise residential areas are newer construction than the high-rises, but not exclusively. There are military areas located in the general vicinity of Kazan.

Makhachkala

Makhachkala, with a population of approximately 600,000 people, ranks as Donovia’s twenty-fifth largest city, but it is the largest city in the country’s Caucasus region. Due to the city’s occupation by outside forces in World War I and an earthquake in 1970, Makhachkala features a large amount of relatively new construction when compared to other Donovian cities. While a small number of areas with dense, random construction do occur, the city primarily features closed, orderly block construction built between 1970 and 1990. Some strip areas occur along the Caspian Sea, with a large number of shantytowns scattered throughout the city. Makhachkala’s city core features large skyscrapers and planned construction built after 1970. The city also contains a core periphery with a mixture of newer buildings and older buildings that survived the earthquake. High- and low-rise residential areas spring up in a helter-skelter manner throughout the city without any apparent reasoning. Makhachkala contains limited commercial and industrial areas, as much of the area relies upon agriculture for its livelihood instead of industrial pursuits.

Grozny

Grozny, located on the Sunsha River, serves as the capital of Gamrun Republic and ranks as second largest city in the Donovian Caucasus (58th overall). While about 325,000 people currently live in Grozny, an increase from 250,000 a decade ago, this does not compare to the almost 400,000 people that lived in the city in 1989. Internal conflict in the area over the last two decades accounts for Grozny’s population fluctuation in the same time span. While Grozny contains all four construction patterns in the seven urban zones, a series of wars with the national government over the last 20 years ruined many buildings and made them uninhabitable. Rectangular block-style buildings dot the newer high-rise residential areas while single-family dwellings dominate the older residential areas. Grozny also contains an old city core, and a core periphery surrounds the old city. The industrial area is concentrated along the Sunsha River, while commercial areas appear in many parts of the city. Due to the years of warfare, many people now live in shantytowns without basic utilities.

Nalchik

Nalchik, located in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains, contains approximately 240,000 residents to make it Donovia’s 82nd largest city, but it is the third largest in the country’s Caucasus region, and the capital of the North Ostremek Republic. Modern Nalchik’s history dates back to 1818 when Donovia built a fort there to defend the country from outside invaders as it expanded to the south. Nalchik is positioned on its namesake river, where a potable spring also provided ample water to the early settlers. Only small boats can navigate the Nalchik River. In World War II, the city received so much damage that much of the architecture dates to the second half of the 20th century. The area’s natural springs made it a place where many rich Donovians would go to “take the waters,” and a resort economy sprung up along with several sanatoriums. The city contains four institutes of higher learning including liberal arts, business, arts, and agricultural schools. Nalchik contains all four construction patterns—with closed, orderly block construction built after World War II to replace the destroyed buildings and dense, random construction in small isolated pockets because the city features large number of parks to create green spaces for the city’s residents. A strip area occurs along the river, but Nalchik has few shantytown areas due to its history as a place for the wealthy to visit. Nalchik also contains six of the urban zones and is only missing major military bases. Due to the construction boom after World War II, the city core features high-rise residential and business buildings. Farther from the city core, Nalchik has core periphery and low-rise residential areas. Commercial areas flourish throughout the city, while the industrial area confines itself to areas along the river primarily focused on non-ferrous metallurgy, light industry, construction materials manufacturing, and machine building.

Energy Sector

Donovia operates four regional electrical grids that connect the entire country. Hydrocarbons (oil, natural gas, and coal) provides 68% of all Donovian electricity while hydropower and nuclear power evenly split the other 32%. 

Nuclear Power

Donovia is a leader in nuclear energy when compared to the rest of the world. They have built a large number of plants in their own country as well as many other countries as well. About 16% of all Donovia power is generated by nuclear power plants. There are 38 nuclear power plants in Donovia with additional ones planned for the future.

Renewable Power

Donovia was the world’s sixth largest producer of renewable energy in the world last year. Most of it comes from hydroelectric power (see section below). Without the large amount of hydroelectric power, Donovia would not be in the top fifty countries in the world for renewable energy. 

Geothermal energy provides less than 1% of all total energy production in Donovia, but that still makes it rank second for renewable energy produced in the country after hydroelectric power. There are five major geothermal power stations in Donovia, but only one produces more than 14.5 MW of power.

Historically, there has been wind energy in Donovia. Wind power, however, has never really been developed on a commercial basis. There is potential for wind power in Donovia, but many the best locations are remote where there is no electrical infrastructure currently in place.

Donovia has other potential renewable sources such as tidal energy, biofuel, and biomass. The Kislaya Guba Tidal Power Station is the largest tidal energy producer in Donovia and the fourth largest in the world at 1.7 MW. Possible locations for new tidal power plants include in the Barents Sea, Kola Bay, and the Sea of Okhotsk. As one of the world’s largest grain producers, Donovia could use the ethyl alcohol to produce power. The Donovian government wants to invest in at last thirty biofuel plants over the next two decades. Biomass produces up to 1% of the energy in Donovia in specific parts of the country. With a vast forest and peat, Donovia has the ability to increase its use of biomass despite have the two largest peat power stations in the world.

Hydrocarbon Power

Donovia is one of the world’s largest producer of hydrocarbons including coal, oil, and natural gas. The country’s also has large amounts of both discovered and potential hydrocarbon locations. This is 32% of the world’s proven natural gas reserves and 23% of the probable gas reserves; 12% of the proven oil reserves; 10.5% of the explored coal reserves and 14% of the estimated reserves. Over 60% of the country’s energy is produced by hydrocarbon plants. It is likely that Donovia will continue to export is hydrocarbon products to the world for the near future because of its vast reserves.

Hydroelectric Power

Donovia is the seventh largest producer of hydroelectricity in the world last year. The country is home to 9% of the world’s hydro resources, but most of it is in Siberia so only 20% of the potential power is being used. Fourteen hydropower plants produce 1000 MW (megawatt) capacity or above, but there are many smaller plants throughout the country. Hydroelectric power produces about 16% of all power produced in Donovia. The potential for expansion in hydroelectric power is great in Donovia if access can be found to the remote locations where dams can be built.

Power Plant Data Matrix

Name or Location Fuel

Type

Capacity (MW) Latitude Longitude MGRS
Akademik Lomonosov 1 Nuclear 32 69 42 00 N 170 17 00 E 59WMT7225132581
Akademik Lomonosov 2 Nuclear 32 69 42 00 N 170 17 00 E 59WMT7225132581
Balakovo 1 Nuclear 950 52 5 28 N 47 57 19 E 38UQC0244775292
Balakovo 2 Nuclear 950 52 5 28 N 47 57 19 E 38UQC0244775292
Balakovo 3 Nuclear 950 52 5 28 N 47 57 19 E 38UQC0244775292
Balakovo 4 Nuclear 950 52 5 28 N 47 57 19 E 38UQC0244775292
Beloyarsk 3 Nuclear 560 56 50 30 N 61 19 21 E 41VLD9766801015
Beloyarsk 4 Nuclear 789 56 50 30 N 61 19 21 E 41VLD9766801015
Beryozovskaya Coal 2400 55 34 46 N 89 04 21 E 45UXB3064761224
Bilibino 2 Nuclear 11 68 03 01 N 166 32 19 E 58WEA6417649269
Bilibino 3 Nuclear 11 68 03 01 N 166 32 19 E 58WEA6417649269
Bilibino 4 Nuclear 11 68 03 01 N 166 32 19 E 58WEA6417649269
Boguchany Hydro 2997 58 41 41 N 99 08 56 E 47VNF0862906069
Bratsk Hydro 4500 56 17 10 N 101 47 10 E 47VPC7245141412S
Bureya Hydro 2010 50 16 09 N 130 18 48 E 52UEA9359469383
Cheboksary Hydro 1374 56 08 17 N 47 27 56 E 38VPH5320424182
Chirkei Hydro 1000 42 58 37 N 46 52 16 E 38TPN5257059953
Chukotka Wind 2.5 65 37 48 N 171 41 24 E 59W5317978844
Kalinin 1 Nuclear 950 57 54 20 N 35 03 37 E 36VXK2209020055
Kalinin 2 Nuclear 950 57 54 20 N 35 03 37 E 36VXK2209020055
Kalinin 3 Nuclear 950 57 54 20 N 35 03 37 E 36VXK2209020055
Kalinin 4 Nuclear 950 57 54 20 N 35 03 37 E 36VXK2209020055
Kashirskaya Coal/Natural Gas 1910 54 51 25 N 38 15 33 E 37UDA5244179123
Kislaya Guba Tidal 1.7 69 22 37 N 33 04 33 E 36WWB0298096395
Kirov Peat 300 58 37 16 N 49 35 47 E 39VVE1847898716
Kola 1 Nuclear 441 67 28 00 N 32 28 00 E 36WVV7719283502
Kola 2 Nuclear 441 67 28 00 N 32 28 00 E 36WVV7719283502
Kola 3 Nuclear 441 67 28 00 N 32 28 00 E 36WVV7719283502
Kola 4 Nuclear 441 67 28 00 N 32 28 00 E 36WVV7719283502
Kostromskaya Natural Gas 3600 57 27 34 N 41 10 30 E 37VFD3048070619
Krasnoyarsk Hydro 6000 56 56 05 N 92 17 37 E 46VDJ5701310341
Kirishskaya Natural Gas 2595 59 29 26 N 32 03 11 E 36VVL4637295059
Konakovskaya Natural Gas 2520 56 44 35 N 36 46 13 E 37UCB5962467155
Kulikovo Wind 50.25 55 37 48 N 63 395 36 E 42UWG3735765060
Kursk 1 Nuclear 925 51 40 30 N 35 36 20 E 36UXC8015028106
Kursk 2 Nuclear 925 51 40 30 N 35 36 20 E 36UXC8015028106
Kursk 3 Nuclear 925 51 40 30 N 35 36 20 E 36UXC8015028106
Kursk 4 Nuclear 925 51 40 30 N 35 36 20 E 36UXC8015028106
Leningrad 3 Nuclear 925 59 50 50 N 29 02 37 E 35VPG145013612
Leningrad 4 Nuclear 925 59 50 50 N 29 02 37 E 35VPG145013612
Leningrad II 1 Nuclear 1085 59 50 50 N 29 02 37 E 35VPG145013612
Leningrad II 2 Nuclear 1085 59 50 50 N 29 02 37 E 35VPG145013612
Moscow TEC-27 Natural Gas 1060 55 54 57 N 37 41 19 E 37UDB1803697489
Murmansk Wind 0.2 68 59 35 N 33 07 06 E 36WWB0473453592
Mutnovskaya Geothermal 50 52 32 19 N 158 12 06 E 57UVU4585421246
Mendeleevskaya Geothermal 1.8 44 07 00 N 145 51 00 E 57UVU4585421246
Nizhnekamsk Hydro 1205 55 41 58 N 52 16 42 E 39UWB8034273369
Novovoronezk 4 Nuclear 385 51 16 30 N 39 12 00 E 37UES1395080425
Novovoronezk 5 Nuclear 950 51 16 30 N 39 12 00 E 37UES1395080425
Novovoronezk II 1 Nuclear 1114 51 16 30 N 39 12 00 E 37UES1395080425
Novovoronezk II 2 Nuclear 1114 51 16 30 N 39 12 00 E 37UES1395080425
Okeanskaya Geothermal 3.6 45 02 00 N 147 37 00 E 55TEK4857486838
Orenburg Wind 1.0 51 46 60 N 55 06 00 E 40UCC6894038647
Pauzhetskaya Geothermal 14.5 51 27 55 N 156 48 42 E 47UUT4799403838
Permskaya Natural Gas 3363 58 29 53 N 56 20 42 E 40VDK6182284348
Priyutnenskaya Wind 2.4 46 12 32 N 46 12 32 N 38TNS9325317967
Reftinskaya Coal 3800 57 06 31 N 61 42 27 E 41VMD2171430217
Rostov 1 Nuclear 950 47 35 58 N 42 22 19 E 38TLT0245275128
Rostov 2 Nuclear 950 47 35 58 N 42 22 19 E 38TLT0245275128
Rostov 3 Nuclear 950 47 35 58 N 42 22 19 E 38TLT0245275128
Rostov 4 Nuclear 1011 47 35 58 N 42 22 19 E 38TLT0245275128
Rostove Wtg Wind 0.3 57 12 00 N 39 27 00 E 37VED2718939739
Ryazan Natural Gas/Coal 3130 54 02 04 N 39 46 39 E 37UEV5092287633
Saratov Hydro 1404 52 03 11 N 47 45 18 E 38UPC8889070521
Sayano-Shushenskaya Hydro 6400 52 49 33 N 91 22 13 E 46UCD9019354140
Shaturskaya Peat/Coal/Oil/Natural Gas 1500 55 35 00 N 39 33 40 E 37UEB3537059850
Smolensk 1 Nuclear 925 54 10 08 N 33 14 48 E 36UWF1610302340
Smolensk 2 Nuclear 925 54 10 08 N 33 14 48 E 36UWF1610302340
Smolensk 3 Nuclear 925 54 10 08 N 33 14 48 E 36UWF1610302340
Stavropolskaya Natural Gas 2423 45 18 45 N 41 30 42 E 37TFL9687820735
Surgut-1 Natural Gas 3268 61 16 46 N 73 29 20 E 43VDH1899494850
Surgut-2 Natural Gas 5597 61 16 46 N 73 30 45 E 43VDH1899494850
Teusj Wind 72 46 28 00 N 38 19 00 E 37TDM4753446126
Troitskaya Coal 1315 54 02 13 N 61 39 06 E 41UMV1169888473
Tyupkeldy Wind 2.5 54 36 00 N 53 43 97 E 39UXA7722453741
Ust-Ilimsk Hydro 3840 57 58 04 N 102 41 37 E 48VUK6356427451
Verhne-Mutnovskaya Geothermal 12 52 33 05 N 158 14 16 E 57UVU4831822641
Volga Hydro 2660 48 49 34 N 44 40 19 E 38UMV7592108177
Votkinsk Hydro 1035 56 47 27 N 54 05 22 E 40VCH2222997881
Yktabivsj Wind 50 54 19 00 N 48 22 00 E 39UUA2871821953
Zeya Hydro 1330 53 46 09 N 127 18 23 E 52UCE8837659170
Zhiguli Hydro 2456 53 25 36 N 49 28 44 E 39UUV9893020812
Legend: MW: Megawatt      MGRS: Military Grid Reference System

Home Heating

Due to the size of Donovia, various methods of home heating are used. Practices found in urban Moscow will not be the same as rural Siberia. In most Donovian cities, the majority of buildings are centrally heated by hot water flowing through pipes heated by a local heat and power plant, usually one per neighborhood or district. The temperature is controlled at the central boiler plant rather than in the individual apartments as most urban dwellers do not live in houses. The heating season for European Donovia lasts from October until May, but cold weather can come earlier. The standard winter temperature for urban houses is about 64° (F), but could reach 75° (F) in the living room. Bathrooms are even warmer at 77° (F).   18 in the house, 25 in the bathroom, 24 in the living room

In rural Donovia, it is common for wood burning stoves to be used to heat the homes where more modern heating methods are not available. Placed in the center of the house, the stove is used for both heating and cooking. 

Water and Sanitation

Water

The vast majority of the Donovian urban population has access to potable water. As population density decreases in rural areas, people begin to rely less on public water systems, and more on local sources—rivers, streams, and wells—to obtain water for cooking, drinking, and washing.

Some NGO reports claim 100% of urban and 88% of rural Donovians can access safe drinking water. About 97% of Donovians may access potable water, but that number drops significantly outside of urban centers, particularly isolated rural areas. Donovian households use about 20% of all water in the country and agriculture uses about 14%, but the lion’s share of over 60% goes for industrial purposes. Even though most Donovian towns possess a water system, less than half of those public systems produce drinking water that meets international sanitary requirements. In rural areas, 59% of Donovians draw water from common wells, which are often contaminated by polluted groundwater.

Sanitation

The vast majority of Donovian urban residents use modern sewage disposal methods to get rid of waste. Urban residents have greater access to modern sewage treatment than rural residents. The more isolated a community is, the less likely it is that they will use modern sewage treatment techniques. Poor disposal methods in rural areas often contaminates ground water that is otherwise relied upon for drinking and cooking.

While the overall Donovian percentage for improved sanitation facilities surpasses 93% in urban areas and 70% in rural areas, the numbers for Donovians living in the Caucasus region are significantly lower. Only 75% of Donovians who live in urban Caucasian cities can access modern sewage systems, and 60% of rural Donovians in the region. Even with “modern” sewage systems used in Donovia, it is estimated that only 8% of all waste water receives treatment before it reenters the country’s waterways.

Transportation Architecture

Donovia has an extensive transportation network that stretches the length of the country, over 4,800 miles from the Baltic Sea in the west to the Kamchatka Peninsula in the east. Major cities are served by rapid transit systems. Roads are the primary transportation method throughout the country. Most roads, especially the unpaved ones, suffer from a lack of maintenance. Distances in Siberia are so great that trains or planes, for the wealthy, are a better alternative travel method.

Road System

Donovia contains over 579,000 miles of roads. About 81% of these are paved, however, the maintenance on roads in the rural areas is not always completed. Rural roads, especially east of the Ural Mountains, are often little more than dirt paths. Of 144 countries evaluated for their road system, Donovia ranked in the bottom ten countries. Overall, roads in this part of the world do not meet US or Western Europe standards. Driving is hazardous, especially in the winter months or in bad weather. Generally, drivers do not obey all traffic laws, and vehicle owners often fail to maintain their vehicles properly. Donovia uses a combination of automobile taxes, a tariff on foreign-made car sales, and a charge for advertising alongside the roads to fund road construction and maintenance.

Donovian Major Roadways

Paved roads

There are approximately 469,000 miles of paved roads in Donovia, most of these are west of the Ural Mountains. The further from the urban areas, the worse the roads become.

Unpaved Roads

There are approximately 90,000 miles of unpaved roads in Donovia. For a country its size, Donovia does not possess a large number of roads. In the past, the government did not emphasize privately owned vehicles, so the requirement for roads remained relatively low. The Donovians did not design most of their roads for heavy trucks, and extensive travel by semi- trailers or other large trucks has significantly damaged the road system. 

Local Driving Habits

Road safety in Donovia is poor, at best, with a high accident rate. Donovia consistently ranks in the top 5 countries in the absolute number of recorded road deaths despite the requirement for drivers to be able to answer 800 different questions to obtain a driver’s license. Drivers often obtain their license by bribing the test examiners. There is often no center line on roads so people drive in the middle. At stoplights, drivers jockey with each other like race car drivers to be the first one to take off once the light turns green. Speeding is common place. Drivers ignore pedestrians so walking on roads, especially in urban areas, is dangerous. The main reason is that law enforcement is quite lax due to budget restraints and legal issues involved in finding witnesses for some of the vehicular infractions. Another reason that if caught, the police will not issue a ticket for a small fee (bribe). 

Public Transportation

Public transportation in Donovia is available, usually on time, and mostly user-friendly. Large cities used buses, subways, and trams to move people. In Moscow alone, there are 19 million public transportation trips on an average weekday. Seven Donovia cities (Kazan, Moscow, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Saint Petersburg, Samara, and Yekaterinburg) operate a subway system. Buses are operated locally not by a national entity. As such, some cities operate a more efficient system than others. There are long-distance bus service available in most large Donovian towns, but usually go no further than six hours away. After that, it is faster and cheaper to use a train.

In smaller cities and in rural areas, transportation often comes in the form a marshrutka or a tax. It is actually a large van or minibus that has a specific route and ran by private companies. In some cities, these vehicles are part of the public system. The marshrutka will make scheduled stops in large and medium towns. In rural areas, people stand by the side of the road and flag them down. Donovian Rail and Port Map

Rail System

Railroads are an important part of the Donovian transportation sector due to a lack of cars by people living in urban as well as rural areas. Over 800,000 people work in the direct railroad industry and create approximately 2.5% of the country’s GDP. In the last published year (5 years ago), over 1.3 billion passenger trips took place on any of the 17 regional railways and carried over 1.3 billion tons of freight accounting for 90% of all cargo (excluding pipelines).  

The government owned Donovian Railways holds a near-monopoly with almost 99% of all passenger and freight traveling on over 80,000 miles of rails. About half the rail miles are electrified. The company operate almost 20,000 locomotives; 25,000 passenger cars; and 530,000 freight cars. Another 300,000 freight cars are privately owned, but travel on the national railroad’s track systems.

In additional to these tracks, there are a number of industrial railways in the mining or lumber businesses whose total track length is about 40,000 mile. About 75% of these miles link to the Donovian Railways while the others are for internal use as a lumber company using its private railway line to transport logs from the forest to the sawmill. There are also a number of narrow-gauge railways throughout the country.

Large cities usually have a subway system that is part of the metropolitan area’s rapid-transit system. The following charge provides details on these cities. Three other cities – Omsk, Chelyabinsk, and Krasnoyarsk – are currently building subway systems.

Donovian Metropolitan Area Rapid-Transit Systems
CITY & SYSTEM LINES STATIONS MILES OF TRACK
Kazan Metro 1 10 9.8
Moscow Metro 13 207 217.2
Nizhny Novgorod Metro 2 14 11.7
Novosibirsk Metro 2 13 9.9
Saint Petersburg Metro 5 69 70.3
Samara Metro 1 10 7.9
Yekaterinburg Metro 1 9 7.9

Air Transportation System

There are over 1,260 known runways in Donovia, but there are probably more. The vast expanse of Donovia (11 time zones) makes air travel an important for those that can afford it, especially east of the Urals where pockets of civilization are widely separated by vast wilderness. Donovia operates nine major airports within 200 miles of its borders with Gorgas and Atropia. Major Donovian Runways Paved Runways: 601

>10,000 feet: 51

8,000-10,000 feet: 197

5,000-8,000 feet: 129

3,000-5,000 feet: 102

3,000-5,000 feet: 122

Unpaved Runways: 659

>10,000 feet: 4

8,000-10,000 feet: 13

5,000-8,000 feet: 69

3,000-5,000 feet: 89

3,000-5,000 feet: 484

// NEED AIRFIELDS (Currently five pages of color coded .xls) //[edit]

Maritime

Seaports

Largest Donovian Ports By Volume of Cargo Handled
CITY LOCATION TONNAGE
Novorossiysk Black Sea (Caucasus) 141.8
Ust-Luga Gulf of Finland (West Coast) 102.6
Vostochny Inland (River Port) 77.4
St. Petersburg Gulf of Finland (West Coast) 59.9
Murmansk Barents Sea (West Coast) 56.1
Primorsk Baltic Sea (West Coast) 49.3
Vanino Strait of Tartary (East Coast) 33.5
Sabetta Yamal Peninsula (Northern Sea Route 27.8
Nakhodka Sea of Japan (East Coast) 26.8
Vladivostok Sea of Japan (East Coast) 24.7
Taman Taman Bay (Caucasus) 22.0
Kavkaz Kerch Strait (Caucasus) 21.9
Vysotsk Vyborg Bay (East Coast) 18.6
Rostov-on-Don Inland (River Port) 17.8
Tonnage is in million metric tons for last year on record

With a population of over 150 million, international trade is a huge part of Donovia’s economy. Between January-August 2016, 468.6 million tons of cargo passed through Donovia’s ports – an increase of 5.7% compared with 2015’s volumes. In order to handle the sheer tonnage of trade turnover, Donovia’s Baltic, Arctic, Pacific and Black Sea coasts are dotted with world-class ports. 

Donovia operates the 15th-largest merchant marine fleet in the world, with almost 900 vessels. This includes 507 cargo ships, 189 petroleum tankers, and 62 refrigerated cargo ships. Foreign corporations own 116 of the ships. Donovia registers almost 360 ships in foreign countries, with over 20% flagged in Liberia. Donovia operates the largest icebreaker fleet in the world. This includes six nuclear powered ships (with three under construction and two being planned) with Brake Horse Power (BHP) greater than 45,000. It operates 25 ships with BHP between 20,000-45,000; and another nine under construction. There are 15 with BHP of 10,000-20,000. This fleet is both government and commercial. Crews may be military or civilian.

Donovia’s European coast has 13 seaports located along the Baltic Sea and Barents Sea. There are 9 Donovian ports on their west coast that average more than 1 million tons of cargo throughput annually. The only port for the west coast that can accommodate Military Sea Lift Commands (MSC) Large, Medium-Speed Roll-on/Roll-off (LMSR) ships is the Port of St. Petersburg. 

The two largest ports on Donovia’s European coast are the Port of Kaliningrad and the Port of St. Petersburg. Kaliningrad is the closest Donovian port to Mainland Europe, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania on the Baltic coast. Comparative short distances between the Port of Kaliningrad and other major European ports, such as Copenhagen, Tallinn and Helsinki makes it unique amongst Donovia’s Western sea ports. Even the drastically icy waters of the Barents Sea cannot slow down Donovia’s trade. The Port of Murmansk is an exemplar of Donovia’s ingenuity and tenacity. Located beyond the Arctic Circle, Murmansk sea port remains ice-free year round giving Northern Donovia’s a vital lifeline. The port itself is also one of Donovia’s largest, in terms of cargo turnover 20 million tons passed through Murmansk over 2016’s first three quarters. 16 berths, the deepest of which holds maximum operative depth of 14.9 meters, serve the port.

Facilities in the Port of St. Petersburg support commercial sea trade, an oil terminal, ship-building and repair, and passenger services. In addition to the Oktyabrskaya (October) Railway, the Port of St. Petersburg operates a fleet of more than 470 vessels that include 122 tugs, 13 ice breakers, and 66 tankers as well as pilotage boats, road boats, a fire vessel, and boats for oil garbage disposal, carrying water, and collecting bilge water. The Port of St. Petersburg accepts vessels to 320 meters (over one thousand feet) in length, to 42 (137.8 feet) meters in width, and with draft of up to 11 meters (36.1 feet). Even the drastically icy waters of the Barents Sea cannot slow down Donovia’s trade. The Port of Murmansk is an exemplar of Donovia’s ingenuity and tenacity. Located beyond the Arctic Circle, Murmansk sea port remains ice-free year round giving Northern Donovia’s a vital lifeline. The port itself is also one of Donovia's largest, in terms of cargo turnover 20 million tons passed through Murmansk over 2016’s first three quarters. 16 berths, the deepest of which holds maximum operative depth of 14.9 meters, serve the port. 

Donovia has 10 seaports located along the Black Sea and Sea of Azov. The only port for those two bodies of water that can accommodate Military Sea Lift (MSC) Commands Large, Medium-Speed Roll-on/Roll-off (LMSR) is the Port of Novorossiysk. Donovia operates ports on the Caspian Sea, the Black Sea, and the Azov Sea. Novorossiysk’s location allows access to the Black Sea and beyond. Transit routes link the port to Europe, the Middle East, North Africa, Asia and even South America. Economically, this is one of Donovia’s most important ports, as Donovia is the world’s biggest exporter of grain. Without the Port of Novorossiysk, it is unlikely Donovia would enjoy such a high agricultural profile. 

Donovia has a large number of seaports on the Pacific Ocean, often in protected bays or the mouths of rivers. A number of other seaports are located on the islands off the Donovian east coast. Many of these seaports provide vital supplies for the local area that is based on the extraction of mineral, trees, or other natural products in the vastness of Siberia. Many of the ports on the east coast also accommodate the tourist trade providing a place for cruise ships to dock.

// Need List of Major Ports (Currently 9 pages of .xls)//[edit]

Navigable Rivers

Ships can also negotiate many of Donovia’s rivers, especially in the non-winter months. Cargo ships travel inland to reach ports that provide the access to Donovia’s vast mineral and natural resources to ship raw materials overseas. The ships also bring in finished products to be used by the locals. The tourism trade on these rivers have increased over the last decade with some ocean cruise ships going inland on the waterways. Smaller tourist ships operate on some of the waterways further inland.

Pipelines

There are 2,175,000 miles of pipelines in 120 countries around the world. The United States ranks first with 65% of these pipelines. Donovia ranks second at only 8% of the pipelines, but amounts to 161,502 miles of pipelines. Pipelines transport fluids including crude oil, refined petroleum, other fuels, water, sewage, and even beer. Large number of pipelines run through Donovia, especially to the west of the Ural Mountains. There are fewer pipelines east of the Ural Mountains and most of them are used to transport oil and natural gas from the production fields to a port where the hydrocarbon products are loaded onto ships for transfer to other countries.  Donovian Hydrocarbon Pipeline Map

Petroleum

Most of Donovia’s pipelines move petroleum from the three largest oil producing areas in Donovia and smaller fields to either refineries or transport the crude oil to other countries or the ports where the crude is loaded onto tankers for shipment to other countries. The first petroleum producing area is centered in the vicinity of Surgut near the Ural Mountains. The second, but lesser field, is in Siberia north of Irkoutsk. The third is offshore in the Pacific in the Okhotsk Sea. Smaller oil fields are southwest of Perm and northwest of Ukhta.

Donovia is in the midst of building even more petroleum pipelines. Many of the pipelines move oil to Europe through Pirtuni. In the last two years, Donovia completed a new petroleum pipeline that takes a seaborne route to Western Europe bypassing Pirtuni as the two countries have had a long history of animosity between each other. Donovia recently completed a new petroleum pipeline to Olvana and is currently building yet another one. As Olvana continues to modernize its entire country, it needs more hydrocarbon products. Donovia has been more than willing to provide the petroleum to fuel Olvanawa’s growing economy.

Natural Gas

Normally, natural gas and petroleum are located in the same vicinity. This is true in Donovia. All three petroleum producing areas also contain natural gas deposits, but the size of the fields are much bigger. There are also natural gas fields in Arctic Ocean and the Donovian Caucasus regions that contribute to making Donovia the world’s largest possessor of proven natural gas reserves. 

Many of the natural gas pipelines follow the same paths as the petroleum pipelines as the customers are often the same countries. Donovian natural gas pipelines flow through Pirtuni to Western Europe, directly to Olvana, and to ports where the gas is cooled to -160° converting it to LNG (liquid natural gas). The cooling allows the ship to take on 600 times more natural gas.

Water

The vast majority of water pipelines in Donovian are local. These pipelines, almost always in urban areas, transport clean water from treatment plants to homes and apartments. In rural areas, most people obtain their water from wells. 

Telecommunications Architecture

For the most part, Donovians use cellular telephones to communicate with each other due to the lack of landline telephone infrastructure. Many residents never owned any type of telephone until they received their first cellular phone. The majority can access news from either television or radio, but some rural residents have no information access via modern methods. (See Information variable for additional details.)

There are more cell phones (200 million) than people (150 million) in Donovia. Donovians use over four times as many cellular telephones as landlines (50 million), and the number of cellular telephones continues to increase as it becomes the primary means of communication throughout the country. The Donovian government licenses over 700 companies to offer communications services. 

Despite this focus on cellular communication, coverage can be inconsistent, particularly in rural areas. Travelers east of the Ural Mountains, are often advised to get two different sim cards for their phones in order to double their chances of being able to obtain reception. 

There are over 14 million Internet hosts operate in Donovia, but most of them work out of Moscow and other Donovian cities north of the Caucasus and west of the Ural Mountains.

Approximately 80% of all Donovians watch one of the over 3,300 national, regional, and local television stations that operate in Donovia. Approximately one percent of the stations are under control or partial control by the government. The other stations, however, must ensure they do not do anything that may cause their license to be pulled by the government. Of the 12 national television stations, the federal government owns one and holds the majority of shares in a second while a bank owns two more, the major hydrocarbon company the fifth, and the Moscow city government the sixth. 

Within Donovia, around 650 public and commercial radio stations operate. Due to the number of television and radio stations under its control, the Donovian government still attempts to control what information the Donovian people receive. Despite these attempts, all Donovians now receive more information due to the inability of the government to control information via the Internet or telephone systems.

Industry

Because of its hydrocarbon resources, Donovia is a very industrialized country. The protection of the hydrocarbon infrastructure remains paramount for Donovia to ensure the continual flow of funds to the government coffers.

While Donovia possesses a large industrial base—with 42% of the population generating 54% of the country’s GDP, this industrial production does not carry over the Caucasus region. Most of this industrial production is in northern Donovia, west of the Ural Mountains. There are small places in Siberia where there may be some industrial output, but it is primarily concerned with the extraction of hydrocarbon products and the shipment of the raw materials to market. 

Food and Agriculture

Agriculture accounts for 20% of Donovia’s workforce (20%). Due primarily to its vast natural resources and poor climate in many parts of the vast country, agriculture plays a lesser role in some parts of Donovia. Agriculture creates only 4% of the country’s GDP.

Only about 12% of Donovia’s land possesses topography, soil, and climate to make it suitable for cultivation. Donovian farmers use about 60% of their fields for crops with the remainder for pasture and meadows. Major Donovian agricultural crops include grains, soybeans, sugar beets, sunflower seeds, vegetables, fruits, beef, and milk. Wheat accounts for 50% of all Donovian grain production, while corn accounts for 20% and barley with just a slightly higher total. Donovia uses 70% of its wheat in products for people while 30% goes to feed animals. Almost all barley goes for animal feed or to make beer. The Donovian farmers use over 60% of their corn for animal feed. Due to its low production cost relative to wheat and a high demand, sunflowers to make into oil usually turn the highest profit for Donovian farmers. Flax is grown for both textiles and linseed oil. In the Caucasus, the most important agricultural products include grain, sunflowers, tea, dairy products, cattle, poultry, and wine production.

In areas that don’t have a harsh winter, such as the lowland Caucasus territories, often plant summer and winter crops, taking advantage of mild winters to increase their crop yield. Farmers who sow winter crops typically begin in August, but it is not unusual for farmers in southern regions to plant as late as October. In April, farmers plant their summer crops such as corn and sunflowers, with completion not later than early June. Harvest for winter crops begins in late June in the Caucasus and moves northward to finish not later than the end of August. These farmers then harvest their corn and sunflower crops in September and finish by October. Many farmers in the Caucasus employ a six-year crop rotation with two years of winter wheat, one year of sunflowers, one year of spring barley, one year of corn, and a fallow year. Other farmers use a seven-year crop rotation plan with two years of winter wheat, four years of perennial forage such as alfalfa, and a fallow year. Farmers can usually get four cuttings of alfalfa in any given year and sometimes five in an irrigated field. Wheat always follows a fallow year due to the need for additional moisture for the crop. In some parts of the Caucasus, farmers omit the fallow year and use an eight-year crop rotation plan with winter wheat, winter barley, sugar beets, winter wheat, winter barley, sunflowers, corn, and finally sugar beets and/or sunflowers.

There are three different types of farms found in Donovia, generally speaking, large corporate farms, small household farms that provide subsistence to rural families, and cooperative farms. 

Oil/Gas

Donovia is one of the world’s largest exporter of hydrocarbon products. More specifically, it exports crude oil and natural gas to other countries. Some of the raw products remain behind in Donovia to be converted to gasoline and other products.

Donovia ranks eighth in the world in proven oil reserves and first in natural gas as estimated by the United States Energy Information Administration. The country will remain a major player in the hydrocarbon industry for decades. Many of these oil and natural gas fields are in Siberia, east of the Ural Mountains. Some of the gas fields are located in the Arctic Sea so climate change could actually allow Donovia to access some of these fields more easily and for longer periods of time. Some of these fields cannot be easily accessed in the winter so while Donovia has the raw hydrocarbon products, it is not always able to transport the commodity to the market.

Defense Infrastructure

Donovia is a major producer of military equipment for its own military. It also produces military equipment for export and sells outdated and excess equipment no longer used by its own military. The Donovian military industrial complex produces naval ships, airplanes, and ground-based vehicles. The country also produces radar equipment, telecommunication devices, and electronic warfare systems, as well as arms and ammunition. Donovian companies can overhaul both their own military equipment and that of neighboring countries if needed. The country’s aerospace enterprises also produce missiles and rockets for both military and civilian use.

Nuclear Facilities

Donovia became the second country after the United States to produce a nuclear weapon in 1951, primarily through scientists kidnapped from Western Europe in the mid-1940s. Donovia is a signatory country to all the nuclear weapons treaties that attempt to reduce the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction to other countries.

While Donovia continues to maintain a nuclear weapon arsenal, most of its work is now devoted to nuclear power production. The country currently has 31 nuclear power plants that produce electricity for the country. With a 30-year life expectancy for most nuclear reactors, Donovia is in the process of building 10 additional reactors—all at current nuclear power plant sites. See the Power section in this variable for more details on the locations of the nuclear power plants.

Space

The Donovian government has an established national space program that exemplifies its technological superiority over other countries in the region. It maintains access to systems with dual- use technologies such as satellite-based communications, earth observation/remote sensing, and scientific experiments.

The Donovian Space Command, the government organization with primary responsibility for space operations, maintains a variety of current operational and developmental launchers and payloads. The Donovians have placed a variety of payloads into orbit, including systems with communications, photographic, and scientific missions. The facility Donovia uses to launch these satellite systems is located just east of Volgograd. The facility is referred to as the Satellite Research Center and has been a site for Donovian space launches and development for decades. The site covers a large area, four kilometers by one and a half kilometers, and contains approximately 19 different pads dedicated to satellite and missile launches.

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