AZERBAIJAN : BAKU : OIL BRINGS BOOM
English/Nat
After nearly a century of isolation the city of Baku - capital of Azerbaijan - is booming again as Western companies scramble for a slice of offshore oil riches in the Caspian Sea.
An international oil consortium this week announced a new pipeline route, setting the stage for large-scale production to start up next year.
Cut off for nearly a century of revolution, war and Soviet rule, Baku is booming again as Western companies scramble for a slice of Azerbaijan's offshore oil riches in the Caspian Sea.
An international oil consortium this week announced a new pipeline route, setting the stage for large-scale production to start next year.
Baku's oil boom at the end of the last century made the Rothschilds and the Nobels wealthy and powerful competitors to Standard Oil.
Their riches were consumed in the revolutionary conflagration of 1917. Jerry-built oil rigs now choke the bay. An evil haze hangs over the Soviet-era oil refineries.
Treacly oil bleeds from old wells into the Caspian. But the oil barons are back, in the guise of the 11-member consortium called the Azerbaijan International Operating Company (AIOC).
The consortium plans to produce 700-thousand barrels of oil a day from two offshore fields by the year 2000, requiring direct investment of eight (b) billion (US) dollars.
Western companies believe the former Soviet republic sits over some of the most important oil deposits in the world.
The rush is now on to see who will be able to capitalise on this huge potential.
SOUNDBITE:
Oil developments in this region are going to be taking place I hope in a rather rapid fashion over the next few years and there's going to be a lot of oil that will come not only out of Azerbaijan, not only out of the AIOC concession but out of others as well.
SUPER CAPTION: Richard Kauzlarich, US Ambassador
The shaky former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan stands to earn over 90 (b) billion dollars from the project, with others in the offing.
Already, a crop of expensive stores, bars and restaurants has opened to lighten the pockets of wealthy, Western oil workers and executives.
For homesick Americans, Charlie's Bar sells hamburgers and steaks.
Nearby stands the Lord Nelson pub where English beer is freighted in for thirsty British oilmen.
Landlord Charlie Christmas is convinced he's on to a winner.
SOUNDBITE:
I think Baku is a boom town. If you're not in it now, you've missed it. You've got to be in, I was exactly a year ago. If you're not in now, you've lost it.
SUPER CAPTION: Charlie Christmas, pub owner
Westerners have flocked to Baku lured by the promise of easy money. But political instability in the Caucasus is likely to make the Baku oil business a high stakes game.
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Cambodia's Casino Boom Town, Created By Chinese Money | The New Silk Road | CNA Insider
Chinese money has transformed the once-sleepy backpacker destination of Sihanoukville, Cambodia into a gambling resort hub with 30 casinos, and 70 more being built. It's touted as the New Macau.
But all that new wealth is eluding many local Cambodian businesses - which are being shunted aside.
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It was a legendary trading route that for thousands of years connected Europe with Asia, and ancient Rome with Ancient China. Known as the Silk Road, it stretched through some of the most rugged terrain in the world 2000 years ago.
Now modern China is building a new Silk Road. The New Silk Road, also known as the One Belt One Road plan, is a hugely ambitious initiative launched by Presdent Xi Jinping in 2013. It will link up over 65 countries and 4.4 billion people. That is about 60 percent of the world’s population.
Channel NewsAsia’s documentary team has travelled across the globe to 7 regions to investigate what the Silk Road means for individuals, companies and countries. The epic journey will take viewers from the future ports of China to naval bases in the Philippines, to safaris in Africa, wushu schools in Iran and ghettos in Greece.
The program received an Award for Best Documentary (International Affairs) at the New York Festivals.
Baku - an oil boom town.
The conservative areas are different from the fashionable streets.
One Day in Baku
The historical centre of Baku reveals its past, from its roots as an ancient city, through its oil boom to its Soviet occupation. The old city is a maze of alleys, mosques, historic buildings and remnants of fortification, including the Palace of the Shirvanshahs and the Maiden Tower, now listed among UNESCO's World Heritage Sites. Much more than a historic site, the city hosts vibrant arts and cultural activities, as well as a bustling modern business sector. In 2012, it's the Host City of the Eurovision Song Contest.
Baku, also known as Baky or Bakı, is the largest city in the Caucasus and is the capital of Azerbaijan. It's situated on the western coast of Caspian Sea and thus there are a number of mud volcanoes and salt lakes around it. The first written evidence for Baku dates to the 1st century and the population of the city is now around 3,7 million.
There are three major districts in Baku: İçəri Şəhər (the old town), the Soviet built city, and the newest part of the city. The old town is under UNESCO World Heritage Sites protection.
Baku is one of Caucasus most important tourist destinations and many sizeable world hotel chains have presence in the city.
Baku boasts many popular tourist and entertainment spots, such as the downtown Fountains Square, the One and Thousand Nights Beach, Shikhov Beach and Oil Rocks. Baku's vicinities feature Yanar Dag, an ever-blazing spot of natural gas.
On the 2nd of September 2010, with the innauguration of National Flag Square, Baku became home to world's tallest flagpole, included to the Guinness Book of Records.
Climate
Baku has a semi-arid climate with hot and dry summers and cold and occasionally wet winters and strong winds all year long. However, unlike many other cities with this climate, Baku does not see extremely hot summers. This is basically due to its northerly latitude and the fact that it is located on a peninsula on the shore of the Caspian Sea.
A curious fact about Baku is that its average year-round temperature (14.2 Centigrade) matches the average temperature of the entire landmass of the earth to within a tenth of degree. Summers are hot and humid, winters cool, wet and breezy.
Loubo in Baku - Buying a mustache at Baku Old City street markets
Travel Vlog Baku, Azerbaijan
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Baku Old City, Maiden Tower, Heydar Aliyev International Airport, Flame Towers, Azerbaijan Tourism, Baku F1 Grand Prix, Palace of the Shirvanshahs, Heydar Aliyev Center, Azerbaijan Carpet Museum, Bay of Baku, Baku Museum, Absheron National Park, Azeri TV Tower, Ateshgah of Baku, Dagustu park, Monument to Nizami Ganjavi, Baku Ferris Wheel, Shahidlar Monument, Mud Volcano, Qobustan
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Baku: Pearl of the Caucasus
The Mirror Studio 2012 ©
The historical centre of Baku reveals its past, from its roots as an ancient city, through its oil boom to its Soviet occupation. The old city is a maze of alleys, mosques, historic buildings and remnants of fortification, including the Palace of the Shirvanshahs and the Maiden Tower, now listed among UNESCO's World Heritage Sites. Much more than a historic site, the city hosts vibrant arts and cultural activities, as well as a bustling modern business sector. In 2012, it's the Host City of the Eurovision Song Contest.
Baku, also known as Baky or Bakı, is the largest city in the Caucasus and is the capital of Azerbaijan. It's situated on the western coast of Caspian Sea and thus there are a number of mud volcanoes and salt lakes around it. The first written evidence for Baku dates to the 1st century and the population of the city is now around 3,7 million.
There are three major districts in Baku: İçəri Şəhər (the old town), the Soviet built city, and the newest part of the city. The old town is under UNESCO World Heritage Sites protection.
Baku is one of Caucasus most important tourist destinations and many sizeable world hotel chains have presence in the city.
Baku boasts many popular tourist and entertainment spots, such as the downtown Fountains Square, the One and Thousand Nights Beach, Shikhov Beach and Oil Rocks. Baku's vicinities feature Yanar Dag, an ever-blazing spot of natural gas.
On the 2nd of September 2010, with the innauguration of National Flag Square, Baku became home to world's tallest flagpole, included to the Guinness Book of Records.
Climate
Baku has a semi-arid climate with hot and dry summers and cold and occasionally wet winters and strong winds all year long. However, unlike many other cities with this climate, Baku does not see extremely hot summers. This is basically due to its northerly latitude and the fact that it is located on a peninsula on the shore of the Caspian Sea.
A curious fact about Baku is that its average year-round temperature (14.2 Centigrade) matches the average temperature of the entire landmass of the earth to within a tenth of degree. Summers are hot and humid, winters cool, wet and breezy.
Baku White City
Being the oldest centre of the world oil industry, Baku within a short period has turned into a large modern city with its own inimitable appearance.
MANY OF AZERBAIJAN'S CITIZENS LIVE IN SQUALOR DESPITE OIL WEALTH
(26 May 2012) As Azerbaijan's oil-fuelled economy continues to prosper, there are concerns that the huge revenues are not trickling down to the areas of the former Soviet nation that most need it.
Twenty kilometres (12 miles) from the boomtown capital, Baku lies the settlement of Ramana, where the locals have to put up with decrepit and often unsafe housing situated amid polluting oil rigs.
It's the unsightly underside to the oil boom that has rained wealth on the prospectors but left average monthly salaries standing at a meagre 450 US dollars, according to government statistics.
The Eurovision Song contest, due to take place in Baku on Saturday, has been used by the government to try to boost its image of an increasingly prosperous emerging economy.
But local activists have also seized upon the increased international media presence to draw attention to the government's authoritarian leanings and failure to deal with the wealth gap.
A teacher's salary is 180 manat (225 dollars), the highest salary is 220-250 manat (275-313 dollars) for teachers. Pensions are approximately 120 manat (150 dollars), activist Mirvari Gahramanova said from her office in Baku.
If family members did not help each other, everyone would go hungry. Is that the oil benefit that was promised to people? The government still hasn't fulfilled its promise. Nevertheless only a small section of society benefits from oil, she added.
Officials at SOCAR state energy company estimate that around one (m) million barrels of oil are produced in everyday and with at least seven (b) billion barrels in proven reserves, there is much oil in Azerbaijan still left to draw on.
Poverty however remains a serious issue.
The town of Sumgayit is a notoriously polluted Soviet-built chemicals industry hub, where factories now lie in various states of disrepair.
Here, hundreds of families are living in cramped, squalid and structurally unsound dormitories.
Rooms designed as sleeping quarters for labourers hold entire families, whilst dozens of people use the same shared lavatories and take turns to use the threadbare kitchen.
Householders complain of the respiratory problems that come with living in such unsanitary conditions.
Health care, they say, is dismal.
One resident, Hamayil Aliyeva, says authorities have tentatively offered renovations, but these have yet to materialise.
This kind of living condition causes disease, she said.
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Bakı gecələri | Baku nights | Баку ночью
The historical centre of Baku reveals its past, from its roots as an ancient city, through its oil boom to its Soviet occupation. The old city is a maze of alleys, mosques, historic buildings and remnants of fortification, including the Palace of the Shirvanshahs and the Maiden Tower, now listed among UNESCO's World Heritage Sites. Much more than a historic site, the city hosts vibrant arts and cultural activities, as well as a bustling modern business sector. In 2012, it's the Host City of the Eurovision Song Contest.
Baku, also known as Baky or Bakı, is the largest city in the Caucasus and is the capital of Azerbaijan. It's situated on the western coast of Caspian Sea and thus there are a number of mud volcanoes and salt lakes around it. The first written evidence for Baku dates to the 1st century and the population of the city is now around 3,7 million.
There are three major districts in Baku: İçəri Şəhər (the old town), the Soviet built city, and the newest part of the city. The old town is under UNESCO World Heritage Sites protection.
Baku is one of Caucasus most important tourist destinations and many sizeable world hotel chains have presence in the city.
Baku boasts many popular tourist and entertainment spots, such as the downtown Fountains Square, the One and Thousand Nights Beach, Shikhov Beach and Oil Rocks. Baku's vicinities feature Yanar Dag, an ever-blazing spot of natural gas.
On the 2nd of September 2010, with the innauguration of National Flag Square, Baku became home to world's tallest flagpole, included to the Guinness Book of Records.
Climate
Baku has a semi-arid climate with hot and dry summers and cold and occasionally wet winters and strong winds all year long. However, unlike many other cities with this climate, Baku does not see extremely hot summers. This is basically due to its northerly latitude and the fact that it is located on a peninsula on the shore of the Caspian Sea.
A curious fact about Baku is that its average year-round temperature (14.2 Centigrade) matches the average temperature of the entire landmass of the earth to within a tenth of degree. Summers are hot and humid, winters cool, wet and breezy.
Inauguration of the Baku Congress Centre took place on April 29
Inauguration of the Baku Congress Centre took place on April 29.
President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva and their daughter Arzu Aliyeva attended the inauguration.
With construction starting in February 2014, the centre’s total area is 6.2 hectares, while the area of the construction covers 46.6 thousand square metres. Vast improvement works have been carried out around the centre, areas of greenery laid out. The building has been provided with all necessary infrastructure.
A 405m2 monitor has been installed in the building’s foyer, which is the biggest monitor installed in an enclosed space, with the highest pixel solution, in the world. In general, over 50 monitors with different sizes have been installed in the building. 17 conference rooms have been created in the Centre. Their total capacity is over 2500 persons. The conditions created in the conference rooms allows to change their capacity according to the number of guests attending the event. The building has been provided with all utility services, including an air conditioning system. Here is also a restaurant, and administrative and other rooms. State-of-the-art conditions have been created at the Centre for live broadcasting.
The auditorium of the Baku Congress Centre too has been built to the latest standards. The hall has 3500 seats. Equipment with application of the latest technology has been installed here. The acoustic system of the hall is a product of leading companies of the world. State-of-the-art technology has been used here for illumination.
BAKU CITY TOUR - BAKÜ ŞEHİR GEZİSİ
Azerbaijan’s capital Baku (or Bakı in Azeri) is the architectural love child of Paris and Dubai…albeit with plenty of Soviet genes floating half-hidden in the background.
Few cities in the world are changing as quickly and nowhere else in the Caucasus do East and West blend as seamlessly or as chaotically.
At its heart, the Unesco-listed İçəri Şəhər (Old City) lies within an exotically crenellated arc of fortress wall. Around this are gracefully illuminated stone mansions and pedestrianised tree-lined streets filled with exclusive boutiques.
The second oil boom, which started around 2006, has turned the city into a crucible of architectural experimentation and some of the finest new buildings are jaw-dropping masterpieces.
Meanwhile romantic couples canoodle their way around wooded parks and hold hands on the Caspian-front bulvar, where greens and opal blues make a mockery of Baku’s desert-ringed location.
Azerbaijan Investment Company | Energy | 60
#66 Driving through an oil field in Azerbaijan
Driving through the James Bond oil field in the suburbs of Baku.
1956 (April) soccer boom in Azerbaijan (Baku)
Найдено (Found) Аleks Сhistogan
Приглашаем футбольных поисковиков,статистиков,историков на сайт
Welcome to
1956 (April) Soccer boom in Azerbaijan
1956 (апрель) Футбольный бум в Азербайджане (Баку)
Baku: The City of Ali and Nino | Trailer | Available Now
A fascinating look at the history of the magnificent city of Baku, Kurban Said's city of 'Ali and Nino'.
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At turn of the 20th Century Baku was an astonishing place. An outpost of the Russian Empire on the Caspian Sea, its newly-minted local and foreign oil tycoons had transformed the city from a sleepy oriental trading-post in the desert into a throbbing international city. A bloody revolution resulted in a brief shining period of democracy before it was crushed by the Bolsheviks. Baku’s history has imprinted a colourful tapestry on this city.
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“I went up to the flat roof, from there I could see my world. The massive wall of the town's fortress, Arabic inscriptions at the gate. Inside the wall the streets were narrow and curved, like oriental daggers. Minarets pierced the mild moon. Through the labyrinth of streets camels were walking, their ankles so delicate I wanted to caress them”, says Ali Khan as he looks over the glorious city of Baku.
In 1970, writer Paul Theroux discovered a lost treasure, Kurban Said’s epic love story Ali and Nino. Their love breached class, religion, and ethnicity and documented Baku’s most tumultuous period. Built on the philanthropy of its oil tycoons, Baku at the turn of the century was “like a mixture between medieval Baghdad, Al Capone’s Chicago, and the Paris of the east. It was literally the most extraordinary place. An irrepressible, exciting, fascinating, cosmopolitan kaleidoscope”, says historian Simon Sebag-Montefiore.
But with wealth came inequality. Life was bleak for the oil workers living in the so-called, ‘Black City’. Crime was rife, and the place was alive with the sparks of revolution. As events in the world began to turn, and the great powers were exhausted by war and revolution, the local forces in Baku made their moves. As different ethnic groups fought it out the city suffered. But in September 1918 secular and progressive Azeris were able to proclaim the birth of the Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan. “Calling this territory Azerbaijan for the first time was very important for national identity. At last people thought of themselves as masters of their own land”, says historian Irada Bagirova.
For almost two years democracy flourished, before it was cruelly and viciously extinguished by the Bolshevik thirst for Baku’s oil. With the fall of democratic Baku, Ali and Nino’s love was extinguished. “The life of our republic has come to an end, as has the life of Ali Khan”, wrote Said, as Ali fell on the battlefield, defending his home.
Under Soviet control for 70 years, Baku is now rediscovering its former glory as it draws on its position as the bridge between east and west, and its rich and varied history.
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Nizami Street, Baku, Azerbaijan
Nizami Street is a pedestrian street in downtown Baku, Azerbaijan. This street is named after 12-century Persian poet, Nizami Ganjavi. Nizami Street is a beautiful shopping boulevard that is known popularly as Torgovaya, which means Merchant Street in Russian.
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Baku's businnes by sea.the capital of Azerbaijan
Baku, capital of Azerbaijan, is situated on the West Coast of Caspian Sea. It slopes like an amphitheatre down the southern Apsheron Peninsula into a bay. Baku's history goes back many centuries. The first evidence of settlement there comes from the fifth century A.D. During its long history ancient Baku has seen both prosperity and decline. In the fifteenth centuries it was the capital of the Shirvan state. Maritime trade across the Caspian passed through the port of Baku.
During the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries the Baku fortress was regarded as one of the strongest in the Transcaucasus and many a bloody battle took place around its walls. As a result of the numerous wars and internecine feudal strife in the eighteenth century Baku lost its status as an administrative centre. By the beginning of the nineteenth century Baku was a typical medieval town enclosed within the fortress with population of around 5,000.The town began to grow rapidly as navigation and trade developed and as the mineral wealth of Absheron was tapped. Baku has become the largest industrial, scientific and cultural center.
The latter part of the 19th century saw a rapid increase in the demand for oil to fuel the accelerating Industrial Revolution in Europe and North America. In 1823 the first paraffin plant in the world was built to process oil extracted in Baku. In 1879 there were nine oil wells in the city, but by 1900 it had grown to 1,710.
The first oil refinery had been established in 1859 at Surakhany, in the suburbs of Baku. By 1910, Baku was responsible for more than half of the total output of the global oil industry.
Baku has changed a lot since the first oil boom started. The fortress is no more than a small island in the vast modern Baku. Take just a few paces and you cross the ages of time.
The former dusty, smoky Baku has become a town of gardens and parks. Tree-lined boulevards, memorial sculptures and fountains have been built to improve the city.
Among the many monuments of Baku that have survived until now, the most interesting is Ichari Shahar (the Inner City) complex, especially the Palace of the Shirvan-Shahs and Maiden's Tower, and the Atashgyakh Temple.
Ichari Shahar is the old quarter of Baku. At the time, it extended to the shore of the Caspian Sea, but in more recent years, a boulevards and an avenue have been built along the shore, reducing the extent of the Inner City. Nevertheless. the winding alleys, back streets, hidden passages, and cul-desacs have largely retained their original character. Having taken its shape over many centuries this quarter includes now a number of unique historical monuments and deservedly called the Acropolis of Baku. Here you can see the slender minarets of mosques, caravanseriais, turkish baths, vast underground reservoirs, and the legendary and romantic Maiden's Tower.
The real jewel of Ichari Shahar is the Palace of the Shirvan-Shahs, built during the 15th and 16th centuries. The palace complex includes: the palace itself; the Divan Khana, where ceremonial receptions and state assemblies were held; the mosque of the Shah; the turbe -family tomb of the Shirvan-Shah dynasty; the mausoleum of the astronomer Seyid Yakhya Bakuvi; the ruins of the old Keygubad mosque; a hamam - Turkish bath house; and underground water reservoir.
Maiden's Tower is a symbol of Baku and its origin goes back to the depth of centuries, to the epoch of Zoroastrizm. There are different versions of when and how Maiden's Tower was built. There is also a romantic legend about girl, who threw herself from this tower because of the unfortunate love. And it gave to the tower its name - Maiden's Tower.
The Atesgyakh Temple is located 30 km from Baku, in the village of Surakhany. In fact, it is an entire religious complex, and not simply a temple, and in its present form it was constructed not earlier than in 17th century. In ancient times the followers of the prophet Zoroaster regarded the site as sacred, and venerated the eternal fires ignited from its deposits of oil and natural gas. After Azerbaijan had become Muslim, it was destroyed, but renewed later by architects and masons from India, who were members of a community that lived in Baku at the time.
Baku Azerbaijan http://www.tvdata.ru/cities
Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, which history dates back to 1st millennium BC. Baku is located on the western shore of the Caspian Sea and is Azerbaijan's largest city, one of few places where Soviet citizens could actually experience beaches or relax in now-dilapidated spa complexes overlooking the salty Caspian Sea. The old Inturist Hotel is still one of Baku's largest. Today's Baku is really three cities: the Old Town, the boomtown and the Soviet-built town. Modern Baku spreads out from the walls, its streets and buildings rising up hills that rim the Bay of Baku.
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Pham Ngu Lao nightlife is also one of Ho Chi Minh’s finest, with throngs of street vendors, bia hoi stalls, lively bars, and downtown clubs filling up the lively scene. Interesting nightlife entertainment spots include The View Rooftop Bar, Seventeen Saloon, Go 2 and Crazy Buffalo Nightclub as well as many smaller pubs that are known for their cheap drinks and happy hour promos. It’s also common around here to meet friendly expats who are more than happy to share a few tips about travelling in and beyond Vietnam. If you want to immerse yourself in the local culture, we highly suggest getting up early and visit the parks within the area. It is interesting to see (and even to join in on) the elders participating in Tai Chi-like exercise sessions. Another must-do is heading to the morning markets such as Ben Tanh Market, where local vendors sell a wide array of fresh produce, household supplies, and Vietnamese street food at attractive prices. As Pham Ngu Lao is not such a large area, it’s the perfect place to explore on foot - the best time to do this is in the morning and late afternoon as the weather can be rather scorching at the height of the day. If you’re feeling adventurous, there are also travel agencies that can help arrange for day trips within the city centre and beyond...
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Hello, I'm Suresh IDEA .
I like walking around new countries of the world, and through this channel I will try to show you this beautiful world , how incredible the world is! I always try to travel on a budget. I make videos in Hindi to make aware people in India and South-Asia that travelling is not a costly affair. I wish everyone explore this beautiful world and learn the best things to make our world a better place to live.
Thank You