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Home  /  Success stories/ List of tenders of the Sakhalin region. City of publication "Nogliki"

List of tenders of the Sakhalin region. City of publication "Nogliki"

Chapter

Sergey Nikolaevich Balakan

Founded town with Center height Population Time zone Dialing code Postal code Vehicle code OKATO code
K: Settlements founded in 1930

The village is dominated by low-rise buildings due to increased seismic activity.

Story

Some believe that this is an ethnonym that owes its origin to the self-name of one of the clans of the Sakhalin Nivkhs “Noglan”, and from here the historical name of their camp is derived - “Noglvo”, or in the Russified version “Nogliki”. Others believe that in its original form it is a hydronym, and associate the appearance of the name of the settlement with the small Nogliki River - the right tributary of the Imchin River, which, in turn, flows into the Tym River in its lowest reaches. In modern pronunciation, these names are certainly a distortion of the original ones, for the Nivkhs called the river Nogly-ngi, and their camp, which was once located on the site of the present regional center, was called Nogly-vo. The name of the river is associated with numerous surface oil manifestations in its basin and means “smelling river”; from the words “nogla” - odorous and “i” - river.

Russian Orthodox Church

  • Holy Vvedensky Orthodox Church, built in 2002.

Famous people

  • Composer A.V. Novikov was born in the village.
  • The famous writer Vladimir Mikhailovich Sangi lives in Nogliki.

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Notes

  1. www.gks.ru/free_doc/doc_2016/bul_dr/mun_obr2016.rar Population Russian Federation by municipalities as of January 1, 2016
  2. [Nogliki: time of big changes. - Vladivostok: Rubezh Publishing House, 2005. ISBN 5-85538-019-X ]
  3. . .
  4. (Russian) . Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved September 25, 2013. .
  5. (Russian) . Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved September 25, 2013. .
  6. . .
  7. . .
  8. . Retrieved January 2, 2014. .
  9. . Retrieved July 28, 2014. .
  10. www.gks.ru/dbscripts/munst/munst64/DBInet.cgi?pl=8112027 Sakhalin region. Estimated resident population as of January 1, 2011-2016
  11. . Retrieved May 31, 2014. .
  12. . Retrieved November 16, 2013. .
  13. . Retrieved August 2, 2014. .
  14. . Retrieved August 6, 2015. .
  15. Kommersant with reference to RIA Novosti

Links

  • Nogliki- article from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia.

An excerpt characterizing Nogliki

- Give me a thimble from there, young lady.
- Soon, finally? - said the count, entering from behind the door. - Here's some perfume for you. Peronskaya is already tired of waiting.
“It’s ready, young lady,” said the maid, lifting the hemmed smoky dress with two fingers and blowing and shaking something, expressing with this gesture an awareness of the airiness and purity of what she was holding.
Natasha began to put on her dress.
“Now, now, don’t go, dad,” she shouted to her father, who opened the door, still from under the haze of her skirt, which covered her entire face. Sonya slammed the door. A minute later the count was let in. He was in a blue tailcoat, stockings and shoes, perfumed and oiled.
- Oh, dad, you are so good, dear! – Natasha said, standing in the middle of the room and straightening the folds of the haze.
“Excuse me, young lady, allow me,” said the girl, standing on her knees, pulling off her dress and turning the pins from one side of her mouth to the other with her tongue.
- Your will! - Sonya cried out with despair in her voice, looking at Natasha’s dress, - your will, it’s long again!
Natasha moved away to look around in the dressing table. The dress was long.
“By God, madam, nothing is long,” said Mavrusha, crawling on the floor behind the young lady.
“Well, it’s long, so we’ll sweep it up, we’ll sweep it up in a minute,” said the determined Dunyasha, taking out a needle from the handkerchief on her chest and getting back to work on the floor.
At this time, the countess entered shyly, with quiet steps, in her current and velvet dress.
- Ooh! my beauty! - the count shouted, - better than all of you!... - He wanted to hug her, but she pulled away, blushing, so as not to crumple.
“Mom, more on the side of the current,” Natasha said. “I’ll cut it,” and she rushed forward, and the girls who were hemming, did not have time to rush after her, tore off a piece of smoke.
- My God! What is this? It's not my fault...
“I’ll sweep it all away, it won’t be visible,” Dunyasha said.
- Beauty, it’s mine! - said the nanny who came in from behind the door. - And Sonyushka, what a beauty!...
At a quarter past ten they finally got into the carriages and drove off. But we still had to stop by the Tauride Garden.
Peronskaya was already ready. Despite her old age and ugliness, she did exactly the same thing as the Rostovs, although not with such haste (this was a common thing for her), but her old, ugly body was also perfumed, washed, powdered, and her ears were also carefully washed , and even, and just like the Rostovs, the old maid enthusiastically admired her mistress’s outfit when she came out into the living room in a yellow dress with a code. Peronskaya praised the Rostovs' toilets.
The Rostovs praised her taste and dress, and, taking care of her hair and dresses, at eleven o'clock they settled into their carriages and drove off.

Since the morning of that day, Natasha had not had a minute of freedom, and not once had time to think about what lay ahead of her.
In the damp, cold air, in the cramped and incomplete darkness of the swaying carriage, for the first time she vividly imagined what awaited her there, at the ball, in the illuminated halls - music, flowers, dancing, the sovereign, all the brilliant youth of St. Petersburg. What awaited her was so beautiful that she did not even believe that it would happen: it was so incongruous with the impression of cold, cramped space and darkness of the carriage. She understood everything that awaited her only when, having walked along the red cloth of the entrance, she entered the entryway, took off her fur coat and walked next to Sonya in front of her mother between the flowers along the illuminated stairs. Only then did she remember how she had to behave at the ball and tried to adopt the majestic manner that she considered necessary for a girl at the ball. But fortunately for her, she felt that her eyes were running wild: she could not see anything clearly, her pulse beat a hundred times a minute, and the blood began to pound at her heart. She could not accept the manner that would make her funny, and she walked, frozen with excitement and trying with all her might to hide it. And this was the very manner that suited her most of all. In front and behind them, talking just as quietly and also in ball gowns, guests entered. The mirrors along the stairs reflected ladies in white, blue, pink dresses, with diamonds and pearls on their open arms and necks.
Natasha looked in the mirrors and in the reflection could not distinguish herself from others. Everything was mixed into one brilliant procession. Upon entering the first hall, the uniform roar of voices, footsteps, and greetings deafened Natasha; the light and shine blinded her even more. The owner and hostess, who had already been standing at the front door for half an hour and said the same words to those entering: “charme de vous voir,” [in admiration that I see you], also greeted the Rostovs and Peronskaya.
Two girls in white dresses, with identical roses in their black hair, sat down in the same way, but the hostess involuntarily fixed her gaze longer on thin Natasha. She looked at her and smiled especially at her, in addition to her masterful smile. Looking at her, the hostess remembered, perhaps, both her golden, irrevocable girlhood time and her first ball. The owner also followed Natasha with his eyes and asked the count who was his daughter?
- Charmante! [Charming!] - he said, kissing the tips of his fingers.
Guests stood in the hall, crowding at the front door, waiting for the sovereign. The Countess placed herself in the front row of this crowd. Natasha heard and felt that several voices asked about her and looked at her. She realized that those who paid attention to her liked her, and this observation calmed her somewhat.
“There are people just like us, and there are people worse than us,” she thought.
Peronskaya named the countess the most significant people who were at the ball.
“This is the Dutch envoy, you see, gray-haired,” said Peronskaya, pointing to an old man with silver gray curly, abundant hair, surrounded by ladies, whom he made laugh for some reason.
“And here she is, the queen of St. Petersburg, Countess Bezukhaya,” she said, pointing to Helen as she entered.
- How good! Will not yield to Marya Antonovna; Look how both young and old flock to her. She is both good and smart... They say the prince... is crazy about her. But these two, although not good, are even more surrounded.
She pointed to a lady passing through the hall with a very ugly daughter.
“This is a millionaire bride,” said Peronskaya. - And here are the grooms.
“This is Bezukhova’s brother, Anatol Kuragin,” she said, pointing to the handsome cavalry guard who walked past them, looking somewhere from the height of his raised head across the ladies. - How good! isn't it? They say they will marry him to this rich woman. And your sauce, Drubetskoy, is also very confusing. They say millions. “Why, it’s the French envoy himself,” she answered about Caulaincourt when the countess asked who it was. - Look like some kind of king. But still, the French are nice, very nice. No miles for society. And here she is! No, our Marya Antonovna is the best! And how simply dressed. Lovely! “And this fat one, with glasses, is a world-class pharmacist,” said Peronskaya, pointing to Bezukhov. “Put him next to your wife: he’s a fool!”
Pierre walked, waddling his fat body, parting the crowd, nodding right and left as casually and good-naturedly as if he were walking through the crowd of a bazaar. He moved through the crowd, obviously looking for someone.
Natasha looked with joy at the familiar face of Pierre, this pea jester, as Peronskaya called him, and knew that Pierre was looking for them, and especially her, in the crowd. Pierre promised her to be at the ball and introduce her to the gentlemen.
But, before reaching them, Bezukhoy stopped next to a short, very handsome brunette in a white uniform, who, standing at the window, was talking with some tall man in stars and a ribbon. Natasha immediately recognized the short young man in a white uniform: it was Bolkonsky, who seemed to her very rejuvenated, cheerful and prettier.
– Here’s another friend, Bolkonsky, do you see, mom? - Natasha said, pointing to Prince Andrei. – Remember, he spent the night with us in Otradnoye.
- Oh, do you know him? - said Peronskaya. - I can’t stand it. Il fait a present la pluie et le beau temps. [It now determines whether the weather is rainy or good. (French proverb meaning that he is successful.)] And such pride that there are no boundaries! I followed my daddy's lead. And I contacted Speransky, they are writing some projects. Look how the ladies are treated! “She’s talking to him, but he’s turned away,” she said, pointing at him. “I would have beaten him if he had treated me like he did these ladies.”

Suddenly everything began to move, the crowd began to speak, moved, moved apart again, and between the two parted rows, at the sound of music playing, the sovereign entered. The master and hostess followed him. The Emperor walked quickly, bowing to the right and left, as if trying to quickly get rid of this first minute of the meeting. The musicians played Polskoy, known then by the words composed on it. These words began: “Alexander, Elizabeth, you delight us...” The Emperor walked into the living room, the crowd poured to the doors; several faces with changed expressions hurriedly walked back and forth. The crowd again fled from the doors of the living room, in which the sovereign appeared, talking with the hostess. Some young man with a confused look stepped on the ladies, asking them to move aside. Some ladies with faces expressing complete obliviousness to all conditions of the world, spoiling their toilets, pressed forward. The men began to approach the ladies and form Polish pairs.
Everything parted, and the sovereign, smiling and leading the mistress of the house by the hand, walked out of the living room door. Behind him came the owner with M.A. Naryshkina, then envoys, ministers, various generals, whom Peronskaya kept calling. More than half of the ladies had gentlemen and were going or preparing to go to Polskaya. Natasha felt that she remained with her mother and Sonya among the minority of ladies who were pushed to the wall and not taken in Polskaya. She stood with her thin arms hanging down, and with her slightly defined chest rising steadily, holding her breath, her shining, frightened eyes looked ahead of her, with an expression of readiness for the greatest joy and the greatest sorrow. She was not interested in either the sovereign or all the important persons to whom Peronskaya pointed out - she had one thought: “is it really possible that no one will come up to me, will I really not dance among the first, will all these men who are now not notice me?” It seems they don’t even see me, and if they look at me, they look with such an expression as if they were saying: Ah! it's not her, there's nothing to watch. No, this cannot be! - she thought. “They should know how much I want to dance, how great I am at dancing, and how much fun it will be for them to dance with me.”

    Nogliki- Nogliki, an urban village in the Sakhalin region, the center of the Nogliki region, 660 km north of Yuzhno Sakhalinsk. Located on Sakhalin Island, on the river. Tym. Railway station. Population 11 thousand people. Founded in 1929. Since 1960 the village... ... Dictionary "Geography of Russia"

    An urban-type settlement, the center of the Nogliki district of the Sakhalin region of the RSFSR. Located on the right bank of the river. Tym, 9 km from its confluence with Nyisky Bay Sea of ​​Okhotsk. Railway station. Forestry, fishing... Great Soviet Encyclopedia

    Nogliki 2- 694452, Sakhalin, Nogliki...

    Nogliki station Korsakov Nogliki Far Eastern Railway Branch railway. d... Wikipedia

    Nogliki RUPS- 694450, Sakhalinskaya, Noglikisky... Settlements and indexes of Russia

    The Okha Nogliki narrow-gauge railway is the largest 750 mm gauge narrow-gauge railway in Russia and former USSR(however, the Alapaevsk narrow-gauge railway has a large total... ... Wikipedia

This section contains current tenders where the place of publication or holding is the Sakhalin region, the city of Nogliki

The Sakhalin region is a federal subject that belongs to the so-called Asia-Pacific region. The Tselikon region is located on the islands. This subject of the Federation includes the island of Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands. The Sakhalin region belongs to the Far Eastern federal district. The capital of the region is the city of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. The main factor influencing the climate and biosphere of the region is considered to be high seismic and volcanic activity. There are nine active volcanoes on the islands belonging to the Kuril ridge, so this natural phenomenon like an earthquake is not unusual here. Near the coastline of Sakhalin Island are the Western Sakhalin Mountains. In reservoirs located on the islands there is large number fish. The coastal waters washing Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands also abound in fish. Here there is a wide range of fish from the salmon family, which are regularly supplied to the table. tenders of the Sakhalin region. Fishermen will catch the famous Sakhalin sturgeon, as well as standard freshwater fish, namely crucian carp, carp, and perch. Most big fish among those who live in fresh water Kaluga is considered to be from the sturgeon family. Its length can be five meters and its weight can be up to 1000 kilograms.

This subject of the Federation belongs to a group of regions that are distinguished by their exceptional wealth of mineral resources, with the exceptional complexity of their extraction. The region has poor infrastructure and a lack of sufficient qualified personnel. The Sakhalin region is characterized by the inability to establish permanent information communication lines operating throughout the year. This all means that the ministry economic development and the Ministry of Affairs Far East included it in the list of entities with an insufficient investment climate. But this does not prevent these organizations from regularly conducting tenders of the Sakhalin region. According to such a criterion as renewable marine biological resources, the region confidently holds first place among all subjects of the Russian Federation. In addition, the subsoil of the region is very rich in all kinds of hydrocarbons, such as oil or natural gas. Especially a lot of these minerals are found on the shelf of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk.

Production and the real sector of the economy are the engine of economic development in the region. Over 1/5 of the productive population of a given subject of the Federation works at enterprises related to this sector of the economy. And GRP production is estimated at over sixty percent. Based on such a macroeconomic indicator as gross regional product per capita, the Sakhalin region is located in third position in the list of the richest regions, right behind Tyumen region and the city of Moscow. Road transport is considered the basis of the region’s logistics map. This type of transportation holds a leading place in the list of passenger movement volumes in the Sakhalin region. Tenders of the Sakhalin region for the supply of vehicles can be regularly seen on all kinds of electronic trading platforms and the government procurement website. Due to the peculiarities of the geographical location of this subject of the Federation, aviation is an extremely important transport from a social point of view. Over nine tenths of the total number of passenger transportation across the region’s borders is carried out using air traffic.

The dream of visiting distant and mysterious Sakhalin has been with me for a long time. And now it has finally come true! No matter how contradictory it may sound, my wife and I decided to go there quite spontaneously, without any preliminary program. After all, the main goal was to stay with our friends living in the north of the island - in the village of Nogliki.

We flew to the main air gate of the island, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, from Khabarovsk on Aurora Airlines. By the way, some of the rules of this carrier seemed not very convenient to me. So, if the luggage consists of more than 1 bag, then you need to pay extra: for the second piece - 2 thousand, for the 3rd and above - 6 thousand each. And this is regardless of the size of the items or the total weight of the luggage within normal limits (23 kg for economy class). Therefore, in order to save on transporting a tripod and a tube with a spinning rod, I had to carry them with me as hand luggage. Well, this is true, for your information...

// sachaja.livejournal.com


We immediately went from the airport to the railway station, purchased tickets for the evening train and walked around Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk a little before leaving. It was doubly comfortable that we had our own guide around the city. This is Alexandra, who was returning home to Nogliki after our expedition to Big Shantar.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


// sachaja.livejournal.com


Twelve hours on the train passed unnoticed. We went to bed almost immediately, and by morning we were already there.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


We were met by Maxim and Natasha and we drove to Sashuli’s house, where we dropped anchor.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


View of the platform in Nogliki.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


Brief information:

Nogliki is an urban village, the final station of the Sakhalin branch railway. Population - 9971 people. (2015). Located on the right bank of the Tym River. Due to increased seismic activity, low-rise buildings predominate in the village. The main city-forming enterprise is "Katanglineftegaz". The village is the center of the oil and gas industry of Sakhalin. By the way, to some extent, one can even say that the start of oil production on the island began thanks to our fellow countrymen.Thus, there is information that the Yakut guide Filipp Pavlov near Okha in the winter of 1878-1879. in one of the fuel oil pits he collected a bottle of “kerosene-water” and brought the collected oily liquid to the merchant A.E. Ivanov, for whom he served in Nikolaevsk-on-Amur.Knowing the value of oil, Ivanov sent a petition to the Amur Governor-General for the allocation of thousands of acres for oil exploration. Ivanov did not wait for an answer: the petition was sent to the authorities only three years later, when he was no longer alive.Married Ivanov's daughter retired lieutenant Fleet G.I. Zotov, who filed a petition for the allotment of oil lands specified in Ivanov’s application. On November 15, 1888, his request was granted, and an expedition led by L.F. was sent to explore the deposit in 1889. Batsevich. It was he who, in 1890, compiled the first geological description of the oil-bearing region of Nogliki, and also explored oil-bearing areas in Katangli and near Nabil Bay.Subsequently, several more expeditions to this area took place. In 1892, the famous shipowner M.G. showed interest in Sakhalin oil. Shevelev. He equipped the expedition with technician S.O. Malennikov to the Nogliki River, where a well was drilled and brought to 138 meters.Name settlement comes from the name of the river - a second-order tributary of the Tym. Translated from Nivkh as “stinking river” (connected with numerous surface oil shows in its basin from the vicinity of which the development of the village began).

On the way, we stopped at a local market, bought some Krasnika (klopovka) syrup to try, and browsed for vegetables, potatoes, and herbs. By the way, crop farming is not developed in Nogliki. Basically, everything is brought from Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, as well as the village of Tymovskoye. We were told that the Tym Valley has a completely different microclimate and Soviet era record harvests of potatoes and vegetables were periodically obtained here, and the Tymovsky district itself was initially considered agricultural.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


Having rested slightly, we went to the seashore. People sunbathed and fished, but no one swam in the sea. The water is icy.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


// sachaja.livejournal.com


// sachaja.livejournal.com


// sachaja.livejournal.com


Here Maxim’s son-in-law, Alexey Mikhailovich, and his faithful friend, or rather girlfriend Bonya, joined our company.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


// sachaja.livejournal.com


Since there was a massive migration of pink salmon, fishing nets were everywhere. The catch is taken to fish processing plants, of which there are several in Nogliki. During the fishing season, people come here from all over Russia to work. Locals are also involved in the work process. Thus, some Noglin state employees go on vacation specifically during Putin to earn extra money. The pay is good, but the work is hellish. Not everyone can stand at the conveyor belt from morning until yesterday and grab tons of fish. Maybe someday I’ll go there specifically to shoot a photo report about it.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


// sachaja.livejournal.com


And here is Maxim and Natasha.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


From here we drove straight along the coast towards Nabilsky Bay.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


We made a short stop at the Aslanbegov Strait. A small river flowed into the sea, not far from the mouth of which they came across someone’s awkwardly placed net.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


Soon her owners appeared.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


When asked about the catch, one of the boys rushed somewhere into the bushes and brought a fish from there.

// sachaja.livejournal.com


Already approaching the bay we managed to get stuck in the mari. Fortunately, liberation from the moss captivity did not take long. Alexey pulled our car to a safe place without any problems.

Flag of Nogliki

Coat of arms of Nogliki

Country Russia
Federal subject Sakhalin region
Urban district Nogliki
PGT with 1960
Postal code 694450
Chapter Viktor Andreevich Sereda
Dialing code +7 42444
Center height 10 m
OKATO code 64 232 551
Vehicle code 65
Population ▼ 10,718 people (2010)
Time zone UTC+11
Coordinates Coordinates: 51°49′00″ N. w. 143°07′00″ E. d. / 51.816667° n. w. 143.116667° E. d. (G) (O) (I)51°49′00″ n. w. 143°07′00″ E. d. / 51.816667° n. w. 143.116667° E. d. (G) (O) (I)

Nogliki is an urban-type settlement, administrative center municipality"Nogliki urban district" of the Sakhalin region of Russia.

Population - 10,718 inhabitants (2010).

Located in the northeast of Sakhalin Island, on the right bank of the Tym River, 9 km from its confluence with the Nyisky Bay of the Sea of ​​Okhotsk. Railway station, airport.

The village is dominated by low-rise buildings due to increased seismic activity.

Population

Population

1959 1970 1979 1989 2002 2010
2197 5213 7130 11546 10729 10718

Airport

Opened on September 17, 2007, the director of Nogliki airport is Roman Tuchin. The airport began operations by accepting charter flights from Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, delivering shift workers for work on the Sakhalin-1 and Sakhalin-2 projects, and receiving helicopters servicing offshore platforms on the Sakhalin shelf.

Since 2011, regular flights have been operated on the route Khabarovsk - Nogliki. Since May 24, 2011, they have been carried out by the Yakutia company.

Climate

  • Average wind speed - 3.8 m/s
  • Relative humidity - 77.3%
  • Average annual air temperature - 0.8 °C
Average daily air temperature in Nogliki according to NASA
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
17.5 °C 15.3 °C 9.4 °C 1.4 °C 3.7 °C 9.4 °C 13.1 °C 14.7 °C 10.8 °C 3.5 °C 7.1 °C 15.2 °C 0.8 °C
Climate Noglik
Indicator Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Absolute maximum, °C 0,0 2,8 7,2 17,8 28,9 28,9 28,9 28,9 27,8 17,8 7,8 0,0 28,9
Precipitation rate, mm 38 23 28 38 69 81 66 109 74 58 46 48 678
Average temperature, °C 18,3 16,7 10 1,1 5,0 9,4 12,2 14,4 10,6 3,3 7,8 17,2 1,1
Absolute minimum, °C 38,9 37,8 30 20 7,2 2,8 0,0 2,2 3,9 15 26,1 35 38,9
Average maximum, °C 14,4 12,2 4,4 3,3 10,0 14,4 16,7 18,9 15,0 7,8 4,4 12,8 3,3
Average minimum, °C 22,8 21,1 15 5,6 0,6 5,0 7,8 10,0 6,1 0,6 11,1 21,1 5,6

Story

Some believe that this is an ethnonym that owes its origin to the self-name of one of the clans of the Sakhalin Nivkhs “Noglan”, and from here the historical name of their camp is derived - “Noglvo”, or in the Russified version “Nogliki”. Others believe that in its original form it is a hydronym, and associate the appearance of the name of the settlement with the small Nogliki River - the right tributary of the Imchin River, which, in turn, flows into the Tym River in its lowest reaches. In modern pronunciation, these names are certainly a distortion of the original ones, for the Nivkhs called the river Nogly-ngi, and their camp, which was once located on the site of the present regional center, was called Nogly-vo. The name of the river is associated with numerous surface oil manifestations in its basin and means “smelling river”; from the words “nogla” - odorous and “i” - river.

The status of an urban village has been since 1960.

Economy and industry

The economy of the region is based on the use natural resources. The main city-forming enterprise of NGDU Katanglineftegaz is LLC RN-Sakhalinmorneftegaz.

Electric power industry: On November 18, 1999, the Nogliki gas power plant with a capacity of 48 megawatts was commissioned.

Communication: city telephone numbers are five-digit. The main operator of landline telephony is the Sakhalin branch of OJSC Dalsvyaz. There are 3 GSM cellular operators: MTS, Beeline and MegaFon.

There are enterprises in the forestry, fishing, and construction industries.

Internal division

  • District UZD
  • Central region.
  • District Kolkhoz-Vostok.
  • Nogliki-2 district