Northern deliveryThe Northern delivery (Russian: северный завоз, romanized: severny zavoz) is a set of annual measures to provide the population of the Russian Far North with basic goods (primarily food and fuel) for long and harsh polar winter.[1] Northern delivery as a phenomenon is due to three reasons:
In these conditions, the only possible is the centralized purchase and transportation of goods from the southern and central Russia to the Far North, which is responsibility of the federal government. Delivery is carried out mainly by air, as well as river and sea, including the Northern Sea Route.[1] Today, 70% of cargo delivered by the program is fuel.[2] Northern delivery is carried out in 25 regions of Russia. The main volume of supplies falls on four regions: Yakutia, Chukotka, Magadan Oblast and north of Krasnoyarsk Krai with a total population of about three million inhabitants.[3] References
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