Gardabani Explained

Settlement Type:City
Official Name:Gardabani
Native Name:გარდაბანი
Native Name Lang:ka
Pushpin Map:Georgia#Georgia Kvemo Kartli
Pushpin Mapsize:280px
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Mkhare
Subdivision Name1:Kvemo Kartli
Subdivision Type2:Municipality
Subdivision Name2:Gardabani
Population As Of:January 1, 2024
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:12061
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:Georgian Time
Utc Offset:+4
Coordinates:41.4608°N 45.0894°W
Elevation M:300
Pushpin Relief:y
Module:
Wikidata:yes
Zoom:12
Frame-Height:260
Stroke-Width:1

Gardabani (Georgian: გარდაბანი) is a city of 11,650 residents (2021[2]) in the southern Georgian region of Kvemo Kartli and is the administrative centre of the Gardabani Municipality. It is located 34km (21miles) southeast of capital Tbilisi and 10km (10miles) from Rustavi in the Kvemo Kartli Plain at an elevation of 300m (1,000feet) above sea level. Until 1947 Gardabani was known as Karayazi (Azerbaijani: Qarayazı) and the city status was granted in 1969, after a thermal power plant was built for Tbilisi in the 1960s causing rapid growth. Since then more plower plants have been built and the city nowadays supplies almost all thermally generated electricity in the country.

History

Gardabani was an inconspicuous village in the southern Georgian countryside until Russian rule in the 19th century. With the administrative division of the South Caucasus by the Russians, the settlement, at the time with the Azerbaijani name Karayaz(i) (Azerbaijani: Qarayazı, Russian: Караязы, often spelled Karaia in Georgian; also known under the Russian exonym Karatapa, Russian: Кара-тапа, Georgian: ყარატაფა, Azerbaijani: Qaratəpə), became the namesake and center of Karayaz uchastok (Russian: Караязский участок) within the Tiflis Uyezd (part of Tiflis Governorate). Karayazi was mainly populated by Azerbaijanis, who at the time were referred to as Tatars like other Turkic-speaking ethnic groups. In 1886, 94% of the more than 5,000 residents of Karayazi uchastok were of Azerbaijani descent.[3] Upon completion of the Tiflis - Baku railway line in 1883 a station opened in Karayaz.

Karayazi was on the main attack route from Azerbaijan during the Soviet invasion of the Democratic Republic of Georgia in February 1921, when it attempted to pass armored trains along Karayazi to Tiflis. By the end of February the Soviets captured Tiflis and soon incorporated Georgia as the Georgian SSR. In 1938 the Karayazi raion was separated from the Tiflis Okrug, making the village of Karayazi the administrative center of the new raion. In 1947 the name was changed from Karayazi to Gardabani,[4] and in 1969 city rights were granted.[5] With the local governance reforms in 2006 all raions were converted to municipalities and Gardabani remained the administrative center of the transformed municipality.

Population

At the beginning of 2021, Gardabani had a population of 11,650, an increase of more than 8% since the 2014 census. According to the 2014 census, the ethnic composition is 63% Azerbaijanis, followed by 30% Georgians. Almost all Assyrians in the municipality live in Gardabani city (almost 300, 2.5%). Other minorities are Armenians (1.9%), Russians (1.4%) and a few dozen Ukrainians, Ossetians and Pontic Greeks.[6]

In 1979, 49% of the city's residents were of Azerbaijani origin, while the proportion of Georgians was 17%. At the time, more Russians (15%), Armenians (5%) and Greeks (4%) lived in the city, who mostly emigrated with the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[7]

Year 1897 1923 1939 1959 1970 1979 1989 2002 2014 20212023
Population- 904 1,846 - 9,131 13,661 17,176 11,858 10,753 11,65012045
Data: Population statistics Georgia 1897 to present.[8] [9] [10] Note:

Assyrians

A relatively large Assyrian community lives in Gardabani. After the Assyrian genocide in 1915, survivors from the Anatolian region of Bohtan fled to the Russian Empire via Yerevan and eventually, after the revolutions and wars of that period, settled ina few villages in the Azerbaijan SSR. However, they never became Soviet citizens, and were deported to Siberia in 1949 where they lived in exile until 1956. The Assyrians who had been deported from the Azerbaijan town Ağstafa were not allowed to return by its residents, so they ended up in Gardabani.[11]

Economy

Gardabani is the center of thermal electricity production in Georgia, after the city was selected in the 1960s as the site for the Tbilisi thermal power plant (Tibilisskaja GRES), which was built 3km (02miles) west of the city. Since then, more plants have been built, and currently the site hosts several gas- and coal-fired power stations that are responsible for almost all thermal electricity production in Georgia. After the 2003 Rose Revolution, efforts were made to expand electricity production for greater energy independence, but also to cope with the energy crisis that plagued the country for years.[12] In 2006 a gas-fired power plant with a capacity of 110 MW opened in Gardabani, the first new power plant since the country's independence.[13]

Since 2012, a further step-by-step investment in the country's energy independence was launched with the construction of new combined cycle power plants in Gardabani.[14] [15] Hydroelectric power plants are responsible for 75-80% of the electricity production in the mountainous country, some of which is seasonal, but additional imports were still required in addition to thermal power production.[16] In addition, energy consumption in the country is increasing and outdated (hydropower) plants are not efficient enough.

In 2015, Georgia's first combined cycle power plant, the 230 MW Gardabani-1, opened.[17] At the beginning of 2020, Gardabani-2 combined cycle power plant of 230 MW followed.[18] In September 2020, the construction of the 272 MW Gardabani-3 combined cycle power plant was announced,[19] and a year later the 250 MW Gardabani-4 combined cycle power plant.[20]

In 2005, a pumping station for the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline opened near Gardabani, completing the Georgian sector of the pipeline. Presidents Mikheil Saakashvili (Georgia), Ilham Aliyev (Azerbaijan) and Ahmet Sezer (Turkey) attended the inauguration.[21]

Transport

Only one national route passes through Gardabani, the Sh66. This is a connection from Rustavi via Gardabani to the Vakhtangisi border crossing with Azerbaijan. With just over 69,000 foreign travelers in 2019, this is a secondary border crossing.[22]

The Tbilisi - Baku railway line which opened in 1883 has a station on the outskirts of Gardabani. It serves as a border station for the scheduled Tbilisi - Baku connection.

Born in Gardabani

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Population by regions . National Statistics Office of Georgia . 28 April 2024 .
  2. Web site: Population and Demography - Population by cities and boroughs (daba), as of 1 January . 2021-01-01 . 2022-03-30 . National Statistics Office of Georgia, Geostat . en.
  3. Web site: 1886, Караязский участок (Karayaz uchastok) . 2022-03-30 . Ethno Kavkaz . ru .
  4. Book: Melikishvili, Liana . სოციალური უსაფრთხოების ეთნიკური ასპექტები პკოლიეთნიკურ საზობადოებაში (Ethnic Aspects of Social Security in a Polyethnic Community) . 89 . 1st . Mtsignobari Publishing House - Shota Rustaveli National Science Foundation . . 978-9941-424-18-2 . 2011 . 2022-03-30 . ka .
  5. Web site: Definition of "Gardabani" . Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd edition 1969–1978 . 2022-03-27 . ru .
  6. Web site: Ethnic composition of Georgia 2014 . 2022-03-28 . Population Statistics Eastern Europe and former USSR . en.
  7. Web site: Ethnic composition of Georgia 1979 . 2022-03-04 . Population Statistics Eastern Europe and former USSR . en .
  8. Web site: Population cities & towns of Georgia . 2022-03-30 . Population Statistics Eastern Europe and former USSR . en .
  9. Web site: Ethnic composition rural Georgia 1923 . 2022-03-30 . Population Statistics Eastern Europe and former USSR . en.
  10. Web site: 1939, Караязский район . 2022-03-30 . Ethno Kavkaz . ru .
  11. Book: Studies in Semitic and AfroAsiatic Linguistics Presented to Gene B.Gragg . 5. The Story of Mem U Zine in the Neo-Aramaic Dialect of Bohtan . 69 . Samuel Ethan Fox . 2022-03-30 . University of Chicago . 978-1-885923-41-7 . en.
  12. Web site: Energy crisis sparks growing unrest: Georgia faces a bleak mid-winter as electricity supplies fall to an all-time low . IWPR via Reliefweb . 2001-01-08 . 2022-03-28 . en .
  13. Web site: President Saakashvili opens new thermoelectric power stations in Gardabani . President Saakashvili Archive . 2006-01-23 . 2022-03-28 . en .
  14. Web site: Georgia's First Combined Cycle Power Plant By Çalik Enerji̇ . Çalık Enerji . 2012-08-03 . 2022-03-30 . en . 2020-08-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200805023918/https://eng.calikenerji.com/Pages/NewsDetail.aspx?ID=24 . dead .
  15. Web site: Turkey's Calik to build Georgian power plant . Reuters . 2012-08-03 . 2022-03-30 . en .
  16. Web site: Temur Gochitashvili - The new gas-fired, combined cycle TPP will significantly reduce imported electricity . Georgian Oil and gas Corporation . 2020-01-13 . 2022-03-30 . en .
  17. Web site: Gardabani Thermal Power Plant Opened . Georgian Oil and gas Corporation . 2015-07-22 . 2022-03-30 . en .
  18. Web site: Giorgi Galharia and Natia Turnava Officially Opened Gardabani TPP 2 . Ministry of Economy and Sustainable Development . 2020-01-17 . 2022-03-30 . en .
  19. Web site: Third TPP to be constructed in Gardabani, Georgia . Report.ge. 2020-09-09 . 2022-03-30 . en .
  20. Web site: Government plans to build a thermal power plant "Gardabani-4" . Business Media Georgia. 2021-09-29 . 2022-03-30 . en .
  21. Web site: Georgian celebrations mark major step towards BTC pipeline completion. BP . 2005-10-12 . 2022-03-30 . en .
  22. Web site: Georgian Tourism in Figures 2019 . 9 . 2021-12-01 . 2022-03-30 . Georgian National Tourism Administration . en .