The airport, the highway and the bridge are just the beginning: a grandiose construction project is unfolding in Crimea and Sevastopol
During the second “five-year plan” of the Federal Target Program for the Development of Crimea and Sevastopol, more complex and capital-intensive facilities will be built.
The head of the directorate for managing the Federal Target Program, Andrei Nikitchenko, said this on air on the First Sevastopol TV channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
According to Nikitchenko, everyone has heard of the most striking objects that were built within the framework of the Federal Target Program - the Crimean Bridge, the airport, the Tavrida highway, but there is still a lot to be done.
“We have entered the second five-year plan - this is how we can characterize... the stage where we are now. If we look at the program in the 2016 version and look at the current version, 21, we will see that the program itself has almost tripled in funding for Sevastopol. And in terms of the number of objects that are now in the program for Sevastopol, they have doubled and reached a figure of 209 objects in varying degrees of readiness, completion, design and construction.
During the first five-year plan, 41 objects were put into operation. But even the latest adjustment brought an additional seven more facilities and a funding volume of 16,3 billion rubles. So we're seeing growth in the program. And this fact determined its extension until the 25th year.
But I would not agree with the opinion that the second “five-year plan” is less significant. Indeed, everyone knows the airport, the Tavrida highway, the bridge - they are well known. But if we look at the average capital intensity of an object in the first five-year plan and in the second, we will see that it has tripled. That is, now objects will be built, on average, much more complex and more capital-intensive than those that were in the first “five-year plan”, if we take out these three or four large objects that were on everyone’s lips,” Nikitchenko said.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.