Novaya Chara

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CountryRussia
Founded1979Edit this on Wikidata
Elevation
725 m (2,379 ft)
Novaya Chara
Новая Чара
Novaya Chara in 2025
Novaya Chara in 2025
Interactive map of Novaya Chara
Novaya Chara is located in Russia
Novaya Chara
Novaya Chara
Location of Novaya Chara
Novaya Chara is located in Zabaykalsky Krai
Novaya Chara
Novaya Chara
Novaya Chara (Zabaykalsky Krai)
Coordinates: 56°49′N 118°18′E / 56.817°N 118.300°E / 56.817; 118.300
CountryRussia
Federal subjectZabaykalsky Krai
Administrative districtKalarsky District
Founded1979Edit this on Wikidata
Elevation
725 m (2,379 ft)
Population
  Total
4,315
  Estimate 
(1 January 2018)
3,949 (−8.5%)
Time zoneUTC+9 (MSK+6 Edit this on Wikidata[2])
Postal code[3]
674159Edit this on Wikidata
OKTMO ID76615156051

Novaya Chara (Russian: Новая Чара) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Kalarsky District of Zabaykalsky Krai, Russia, located in the basin of the Chara River, in the eastern parts of Stanovoy Range, approximately 600 kilometers (370 mi) in a straight line northeast of the krai's administrative center of Chita, and 16 kilometers (9.9 mi) from the district's administrative center of Chara. Population: 4,315(2010 census);[1] 4,693(2002 census);[4] 8,787(1989 Soviet census).[5]

It was founded in connection to the construction of the Baikal-Amur Mainline in the 1980s, near the older village of Chara, named for the river on which it stood. The station and settlement were built by workers from the Kazakh SSR; as part of the BAM project, sections of the route were placed under the patronage of Komsomol brigades from different parts of the Soviet Union.

Regular rail traffic from Tynda in Amur Oblast to Novaya Chara began in 1988; traffic from the west of the settlement on the section from Severobaykalsk started in 1989. The completion of the BAM did not bring the expected economic development to the area, and with the economic crisis of the late 1980s, around half the population left. Nearby are the Udokan copper deposit, Chineysky vanadium deposit and Unkur silver-copper deposit.

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Economy

References

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