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Ahal Region

Region of Turkmenistan

Ahal Region

Region of Turkmenistan

FieldValue
nameAhal
native_nameAhal welaýaty
native_name_langtk
settlement_typeRegion
image_skyline{{multiple image
borderinfobox
perrow1/2/2/2/2
total_width250
image1Darvasa gas crater panorama crop.jpg
image2Ruins of Seýit Jemaladdin Mosque.jpg
footerFrom the top, Darvaza Gas Crater, Ruins of Seýit Jemaladdin Mosque}}
image_mapAhal Province in Turkmenistan.svg
map_captionAhal region in Turkmenistan
area_total_km297160
population_as_of2022 census
population_total886,845
population_density_km2auto
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameTurkmenistan
subdivision_type1Capital
subdivision_name1Arkadag
website
leader_nameÝazmuhammet Gurbanowa
leader_titleGovernor

Ahal Region (, ) is one of five provinces of Turkmenistan. It borders Iran and Afghanistan along the Kopet Dag range. Ahal covers an area of 97160 km2, and it has a population of 886,845 as of the 2022 census.

Overview

In 2000, Ahal Region accounted for 14% of Turkmenistan's population, 11% of the total number of employed, 23% of agricultural production (by value), and 31% of the country's total industrial production.

Ahal's agriculture is irrigated by the Karakum Canal, which stretches all the way across the province from east to west, tracking Turkmenistan's southern border. Another water source is the Tejen River, which flows north from Afghanistan in the southeast corner of the province, passing through two large reservoirs south of the city of Tejen.

Ahal is known for the Battle of Geok Tepe of 1881, today the site of the imposing Saparmurat Hajji Mosque, and for the Bäherden underground warm lake (in the Kov Ata karst cave), both west of Ashgabat.

The administrative centre of Ahal Province is Arkadag, a $1.5 billion mostly greenfield development just west of the city limit of Ashgabat, Turkmenistan's capital city. The city was named in honor of former president Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, whose official nickname is Arkadag. The capital until 20 December 2022 was Änew (or Anau), a city on the south-eastern outskirts of Ashgabat. One other notable city is Tejen in the south-east near the border with Mary Province. Turkmenistan's largest city, Ashgabat, is surrounded by Ahal Province, but as the national capital it enjoys status equal to that of a province and is outside Ahal Province's jurisdiction.

History

From antiquity through the early 1800s, the area was populated by Persian-speaking peoples. Nisa, since 2013 located within the city limits of Ashgabat, was likely founded in the third century BCE and was the first capital of the Parthian Empire. The area just north of the Kopet Dag mountains forms an oasis due to runoff from the mountains and was thus part of the Silk Road caravan route from roughly 2000 BCE until around 1500 CE.

Turkmen period

British Lieutenant Colonel H.C. Stuart reported in 1881 that the Ahal branch of the Teke tribe of the Turkmen ethnic group arrived in the area around 1830 and established several semi-nomadic villages (auls) between what is now the city of Gyzylarbat and village of Gäwers, inclusive. The Ahal area was formally part of Persia but de facto autonomous under Turkoman tribal control until Russian forces defeated the Teke army at the Battle of Geok Tepe in January 1881.

Soviet period

Originally named Ashgabat oblasty in Turkmen (, Cyrillic Turkmen Ашгабат областы), the future Ahal Province was initially formed on 21 November 1939, abolished on 25 May 1959, and reconstituted on 27 December 1973. In 1977 Ashgabat oblasty was awarded the Order of Lenin.

Independent Turkmenistan

On 14 December 1992, the People's Council () adopted Law No. 783-ХП, "On the Order of Deciding Issues of Administrative-Territorial Structure of Turkmenistan", and Resolution XM-6. These statutes changed the Russian word oblast' (область), rendered in Turkmen Cyrillic as област, to the Persian loan word welaýat in reference to provinces. The resolution renamed Ashgabat oblasty (, Turkmen Сyrillic: Ашгабат областы) to Ahal welaýaty. Anau was designated the capital of Ahal. The capital was moved to the new city of Arkadag on 20 December 2022.

Etymology

Ataniyazov wrote,The meaning of the name is not clear. Khiva historians Munis and Agahi write that the name means "drainage ditch" and it was so named because the Ahal lands were swampy and suitable for rice cultivation (MITT, II, p. 359)...Vambery, on the other hand, writes that the word is derived from the word ak [white] and the addition of -al (Vambery, p. 264).

Demographic

Table of National composition of the population of Ahal region (2022)

Table:

EthnicityTotalUrbanRuralPopulation%Population%Population%total**886,845**100%
Turkmens874,43198.60%303,69896.78%570,73399.60%
Persians5,4790.62%4,9811.59%4980.09%
Russians2,1540.24%1,8630.59%2910.05%
Uzbeks1,7740.20%1,4650.47%3090.06%
Azerbaijanis1,1350.13%7770.25%3580.06%
Balochi9230.10%3260.10%5970.10%
Tatars1810.02%1210.04%600.01%
Kazakhs1480.02%1310.04%170.00%
Armenians1430.02%1230.04%200.01%
Kurds1130.01%1000.03%130.00%
Afghans1070.01%230.01%840.01%
Ukrainians500.01%410.01%90.00%
Lezgins240.00%160.01%80.00%
Karakalpaks130.00%70.00%60.00%
Koreans40.00%20.00%20.00%
other nationalities1660.02%1110.04%550.01%
313,785100%573,060100%

Administrative subdivisions

A camel roams the Karakum Desert in Ahal Province

Districts

Effective January 5, 2018, Ahal Province (Ahal welaýaty) is subdivided into 7 districts (etrap, plural etraplar):

  1. Ak bugdaý (formerly Gäwers)
  2. Babadaýhan (formerly Kirov)
  3. Bäherden (formerly Baharly)
  4. Gökdepe
  5. Kaka
  6. Sarahs
  7. Tejen

Municipalities

As of 9 November 2022, the province included 9 cities (города or şäherler), 9 towns (посёлки or şäherçeler), 82 rural or village councils (сельские советы or geňeşlikler), and 231 villages (села, сельские населенные пункты or obalar).

:* Altyn Asyr :* Änew :* Arkadag (provincial capital) :* Babadaýhan :* Bäherden :* Gökdepe :* Kaka :* Murche, abandoned village :* Sarahs :* Tejen

As of May 2013 Ruhabat District and the city of Abadan (today called Büzmeýin), until then in Ahal Province, were incorporated into the city of Ashgabat and abolished as separate municipalities. In January 2018, the Babadaýhan District of Ahal Province was re-established, and the Kaka, Tejen, Sarahs Districts were reaffirmed. Baharly's former name, Bäherden, was restored in the same decree, and the Altyn Asyr District was abolished.

On 9 November 2022 the new city of Arkadag was formally incorporated as the new capital city of Ahal and was accorded district status.

Economy

Agriculture

A Claas-brand combine harvests wheat in Ahal Province
A mixed flock of goats and sheep grazes on a hillside in Ahal Province

Ahal produces wheat and cotton. Cotton grown in Ahal is ginned at mills in Akdepe, Gökdepe, Kaka, and Tejen, and spun into cotton yarn at mills in Ashgabat, Gökdepe, and Kaka. Textile complexes are found in Ashgabat, Akdepe (Bäherden), Gökdepe, and Kaka.

Cotton seed is crushed for extraction of oil and meal at the Ahal Vegetable Oil Enterprise plant near Ovadandepe. It was opened on 17 May 2010 with a design capacity to process 96,000 tons of cotton seed per year, with daily production of 50 tons of cottonseed oil, 10 tons of margarine, 140 tons of cottonseed meal and 70 tons of soybean hulls.

Vegetables7.67.07.1227.4223.1233.5

Industry

On June 28, 2019, a $1.7 billion factory for producing gasoline out of natural gas was commissioned in Ovadandepe, Gökdepe District. Built by Rönesans and Kawasaki using technology from Haldor Topsoe, the factory has a design capacity of 600,000 tonnes of gasoline, 12,000 tonnes of Diesel fuel, and 115,000 tonnes of liquefied petroleum gas per year, produced from 1.7 billion cubic meters of natural gas.

In 2019, Turkmenistan produced 5.1 million standard square meters (4mm thickness) of sheet glass, all of it in Ahal. A$375 million float glass and glass container plant built by Tepe Inşaat of Turkey was opened February 14, 2018, in Ovadandepe north of Ashgabat. It replaced a Soviet-era glass factory located in central Ashgabat. In 2019, the value of Turkmenistan's glass exports as reported by trading partners was $9.5 million.

A steel smelter, Türkmen Demir Önümleri Döwlet Kärhanasy (), operating on scrap metal is located at kilometer 22 on the Ashgabat-Dashoguz Automobile Highway near Ovadandepe. It produces mainly rebar and channel iron.

The $240 million Tejen urea (carbamide) plant, inaugurated on March 18, 2005, has a design capacity of 350,000 tonnes of urea per year.

The Baherden Cement Plant, put into operation in 2005, has a design capacity of one million tons of cement per year. In 2019 the Baherden plant reportedly was operating at 64% of capacity. The Kelete Cement Plant has a design capacity of one million tons per year, but as of 2019 was producing at 8.1% of that level.

The Derweze State Electrical Power Station (), a 504.4 megawatt power plant built by Çalık Enerji in 2015, is located near Ovadandepe. The Ahal State Power Station (), located about 9 kilometers NE of Anau, with design capacity of 650 megawatts, was constructed in 2010 to power the city of Ashgabat and expanded in 2013 and 2014 to power the Olympic Village.

Cotton fabric
million m225.923.831.8

Government installations

The Ovadandepe Prison is located approximately 30 kilometers NNW of G. Orazow adyndaky oba, the seat of the Ovadandepe Rural Council (). The National Space Agency's ground station for communicating with the TurkmenÄlem-52E satellite is located approximately 6 kilometers north of the Ashgabat city limit off the P-1 highway.

People

  • Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow
  • Nurmuhammet Hanamow
  • Berdi Kerbabayev
  • Saparmurat Niyazov

Partner regions

Ahal Region cooperates with:

  • RUS Moscow Oblast, Russia (1995)

References

References

  1. ''Statistical Yearbook of Turkmenistan 2000–2004'', National Institute of State Statistics and Information of Turkmenistan, Ashgabat, 2005.
  2. "Turkmenistan: Regions, Major Cities & Towns – Population Statistics, Maps, Charts, Weather and Web Information".
  3. ''Social-economic situation of Turkmenistan in 2000'', National Institute of State Statistics and Information of Turkmenistan, Ashgabat, 2001, pp. 129-130 {{in lang. ru.
  4. [http://tourkz.com/eng/articles/desert.html Baharden warm lake] {{webarchive. link. (November 21, 2008 in Kov Ata cave.)
  5. [http://www.economy.gov.tm/arhiw/GID/GID_eng.doc Turkmenistan: an official guide] {{webarchive. link. (October 6, 2011 (downloadable Word file).)
  6. (21 December 2022). "Постановление Меджлиса Милли Генгеша Туркменистана об отнесении к категории города нового современного административного центра Ахалского велаята и присвоении ему наименования". Электронная газета «Золотой век».
  7. (1 November 2018). "В Масштабной Программе Развития Регионов--Приоритеты Социальной Политики". Нейтральный Туркменистан.
  8. (31 October 2018). "Глава государства рассмотрел проект нового административного центра Ахалского велаята". Государственное информационное агентство Туркменистана.
  9. (1 November 2018). "Ahal welaýatynda sebitiň Aşgabatdan pes oturmaýan täze paýtagty gurlar". Chronicles of Turkmenistan.
  10. Rickleton, Chris. (25 December 2022). "Turkmenistan Builds New $1.5 Billion City, Far Removed From Grinding Poverty". [[RFE/RL]].
  11. Meredow, Begenç. (26 December 2022). "Образец славного будущего страны". Нейтральный туркменистан.
  12. (1977). "The Country of the Turkomans". Oguz Press and the Royal Geographical Society.
  13. (1984). "Туркменская Советская Социалистическая Республика: Энциклопедический справочник". Издательство Чувашского обкома КПСС.
  14. (14 December 1992). "Türkmenistanyň Halk Maslahatynyň Çözgüdi HM-6 Türkmenistanda administratiw-territorial düzümleriň statusyny bellemek hakynda". Parliament of Turkmenistan.
  15. "Turkmenistan Geoname Changes / Central Government Sole Authority for Geographic Names". OpenStreetMap.
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  17. link
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  19. (5 January 2018). "Парламент Туркменистана внёс изменения в административно-территориальное деление Ахалского велаята".
  20. "Административно-территориальное деление Туркменистана по регионам по состоянию на 1 января 2017 года".
  21. (10 November 2022). "Постановление Меджлиса Милли Генгеша Туркменистана". Электронная газета «Золотой век».
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  29. Ravn, Svend. (June 28, 2019). "World's only natural gas-to-gasoline plant in operation in Turkmenistan".
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  31. Aliyeva, Jeila. (August 31, 2020). "Turkmenistan and Japan review gasoline production plant construction in Akhal region". NeftegazRU.com.
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  35. (February 15, 2018). "TURKMENISTAN HAS PUT INTO OPERATION A GLASS FACTORY, WHICH HAS NO ANALOGUES IN THE REGION". Turkmen Petroleum.
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