Restoring the Donets Coal Field ? Pits Wrecked by the Germans Reconditioned Under Standard Plan

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
George H. Hanna
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
192 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1945

Abstract

THE importance of the Donets coal field (the Donbas) to the national economy of the Soviet Union is well known. Great as was the significance of this tremendous deposit of coal in prewar days it is destined to become an even greater factor in the economic life of the country now that the tremendous havoc wrought by the Germans is being remedied. Since the war began, new coal fields have been extended; for example output of the Moscow and Karaganda (Kazakhstan) fields has become considerably larger while new mines are producing coal in several parts of Uzbekistan and Kirghizia. The huge West Siberian coal field, the Kuznetsk Basin, is producing more coal than ever before to supply the industries of that region and of the Urals. But so great has been the development of industry to meet war needs, especially in those districts of the Soviet Union that lie to the East of the Urals, that the coal obtained, eked out by such locally-won fuels as peat and wood, is still barely sufficient to meet industrial requirements. The main burden of the coal supply for the restored industries of the West, therefore, will fall on the Donbas.
Citation

APA: George H. Hanna  (1945)  Restoring the Donets Coal Field ? Pits Wrecked by the Germans Reconditioned Under Standard Plan

MLA: George H. Hanna Restoring the Donets Coal Field ? Pits Wrecked by the Germans Reconditioned Under Standard Plan. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1945.

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