Russia is in the grip of a bitterly cold winter which
is having severe consequences for both its residents and industry. Now
the effects are extending to other parts of Europe.
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By Chloe Arnold
BBC News, Moscow
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This winter is colder than even most Russians are used to
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It was 32C yesterday. That is, minus 32C.
Russians do not bother saying the minus part because at this time of year it almost never gets above zero.
Of course they are used to temperatures here that we
only come across in our deep freezes. But this week has brought the
sort of cold that has even the hardiest of Muscovites shaking their
heads.
It has not been this cold here since 1979.
It is deceptive, because as I write this, the sun is
streaming in through the window and I can hear children laughing and
throwing snowballs at each other in the yard at the back of the house.
But when you step outside, the cold hits you like a
smack between the eyes, the hairs in your nose start to freeze and
unless you wrap a scarf around your face, your cheeks become numb
within minutes.
The reason the children are throwing snowballs is that a
lot of schools across the capital have closed. You do not have to study
here if the temperature reaches minus 30C.
It is so cold that trolleybuses and trams have stopped
working. The overhead wires have become so brittle they are simply
snapping to pieces.
In any case, it is far too cold to stand at a bus stop
waiting for a bus and as a result, the metro is full to bursting with
passengers backing up as far as street level at some stations.
Power rationing
Homeless Russians are particularly susceptible to the extreme winter
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Wednesday night saw the highest demand for electricity in the capital for 15 years.
The city's authorities are appealing to people not to plug in extra heaters so that there is enough energy to go round.
The lights above the giant advertising hoardings in the
centre have been switched off and casinos have been asked to turn off
the flashing signs outside their premises to prevent further rationing
of electricity.
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At Moscow Zoo all the animals have been moved indoors, even the polar bears
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A friend rang to tell me he had been working by candlelight for most of
the day. His office has just moved to a former furniture factory and
the authorities have switched off the lights in the building.
Tramps who sleep in the ventilation shafts of the metro
and are usually asked to move on by the police have been given a
special dispensation to stay put until it gets a little warmer.
At Moscow Zoo all the animals have been moved indoors, even the polar bears.
And there are rumours in some of the newspapers that the elephants are being given two litres of vodka a day to warm them up.
Icy dangers
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In southern Russia, 10 people froze to death in just one day this week
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One of the biggest problems every year comes from people getting drunk
outside and then falling over in the snow and freezing to death.
Russians sometimes drink heavily on their own, and
outdoors. Every spring when the city starts to thaw, road sweepers
discover dozens of bodies under the snow and ice.
This winter, though, it is likely to be a lot worse.
In Volgograd, formerly Stalingrad, in southern Russia,
10 people froze to death in just one day this week. All of them had
been drinking.
Entrepreneurial spirit
For the "walrus" the cold presents few problems
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But it is not all bad news.
Winter clothing stores are doing a roaring trade and sports shops are selling out of sledges, ice skates and cross-country skis.
With cars refusing to start all over the city, gangs of
enterprising young men are riding round with jump leads in their
pockets, offering to start people's engines and then charging them a
small fortune.
And the cold has not dampened the spirits of that curious breed here known as the walrus.
These men and women regularly strip off and dunk themselves in ice holes in lakes or rivers.
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Some of the oil wells in Siberia have frozen, and Russia is producing 200,000 barrels of oil a day less than it was last month
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The colder it is, the better, they say, though I cannot imagine many
things worse than standing in the middle of a frozen river with no
clothes on in minus 32C.
State emergency
But if you think it sounds cold in Moscow, how about this.
Last week, the city of Tomsk in western Siberia declared
a state of emergency when temperatures fell to 57C. Sorry, I mean minus
57C.
It was so cold most people's thermometers were no use any more as they do not go past minus 40C.
More seriously, some of the oil wells in Siberia have
frozen, and Russia is producing 200,000 barrels of oil a day less than
it was last month.
And Gazprom, the state gas company, has had to cut back
its exports to western Europe to try to cover demand domestically. That
has meant there has been a surge in gas prices in Europe.
But some people are taking it all in their stride.
A man from BBC Radio 3 was travelling to Siberia this
week to make a programme about the region. "I'd better warn you that
it's below minus 50C there," I told him on the telephone before he
arrived.
"Ah," he said. "Well in that case, I think I ought to buy myself a hat."
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