Karabash, Chelyabinsk Oblast
Karabash is a town in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, located northwest of Chelyabinsk. Population: 15,942 ;
Toponymy
The town's name, Karabash, means "black peak" in numerous Turkic languages.History
It was founded in 1822 as a settlement of gold-miners. While gold mining was the town's original main industry, large deposits of copper were subsequently discovered near Karabash. In 1837, the town's first copper smelting plant was built, which existed for just five years, and proved to be less economically lucrative than the town's gold industry. A second copper smeltery was built in 1907, but lasted for only three years. In 1910, a new copper smelting plant was built in Karabash, which remains the town's primary plant. The plant achieved much more success than its predecessors, spurring substantial growth in the town during the early 1910s, and produced one-third of all smelted copper in Russia by 1915.During the Russian Civil War, copper production in Karabash stopped, and the local copper mines became flooded.
The town's copper mines were gradually restored from 1926 to 1929, and copper production grew significantly in the following years. Town status was granted to Karabash on June 20, 1933. By 1935, the town was producing more than three times the smelted copper than it did in 1917. Prior to World War II, the population of Karabash reached approximately 50,000 people. Approximately 5,000 Karabash residents went on to fight in the Eastern Front during the war. From the 1950s through the 1970s, Karabash continued to modernize, aided by mass electrification, the introduction of a gas pipeline, and the construction of water treatment facilities. During this time, housing construction also boomed.
However, during the 1970s, Soviet authorities closed a number of copper mines in Karabash, and attempted to introduce non-mining industries to Karabash, such as a factory producing radios, and another producing clothing. Despite this, Karabash's population fell dramatically. In November 1989, Soviet authorities closed the copper works in town, citing its environmental impact.
A study by the Chelyabinsk Oblast's regional government in 1994 found significant negative health effects in the town, including high rates of stunted growth and birth defects. The country's environmental ministry declared the area an environmental disaster zone in 1996. Despite this, a private company acquired the plant in 1998, and restarted its operations. In 2004, Russian Copper Company, a private company acquired the plant.
In 2015, a protest against the environmental and health effects of the town's copper smeltery was attended by approximately 500 people.