Putin orders major investments to boost Kaliningrad connectivity
Putin personally ordered the improvement of transportation and food supply in the Kaliningrad region. Acting governor of the region, Alexei Besprizvannykh, and the head of the regional airport announced that they will spend 13 billion rubles on the expansion of the port. Additionally, each resident of the region will receive four discounted tickets for flights to Russia.
29 June 2024 09:03
Within five to six years, Khrabrovo Airport near Kaliningrad will be expanded to handle seven million passengers (the region has one million residents). The authorities and the airport management company plan to spend 13.5 billion rubles (approximately 266 million CAD). Last year, the airport handled 4.3 million passengers, a record in its history, due to the influx of Russians to the Baltic coast as many countries do not wish to welcome tourists from Putin's country.
Khrabrovo is one of the twenty largest airports in the Russian Federation in terms of passenger traffic. The terminal owner is the Novaport holding, belonging to entrepreneur Roman Trotsenko. Recently, both the company and the owner were targeted by the latest EU sanctions due to ties with the war in Ukraine. However, Russian authorities are assuring that the funds for these investments will be found.
The President knows and understands all the region's problems well. He set clear goals for me. Transportation and food supply come first, Alexei Besprizvannykh told the "Komsomolskaya Pravda" newspaper.
In May, Putin summoned him to the Kremlin and entrusted him with the duties of governor of the Kaliningrad region (his predecessor was promoted to minister). The region is remote from the rest of the country, and in the current geopolitical situation, it is important that residents do not feel this disconnection.
The residents of Kaliningrad cut off from Russia. Tickets as consolation
Poland and Lithuania have, for months, not allowed vehicles with Russian license plates onto their territories. Kaliningrad authorities decided to make travel easier this year by subsidizing airline tickets. Passengers are entitled to two discounted round-trip tickets. For the equivalent of between 49-42 CAD, one can fly to Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Murmansk, and Arkhangelsk, among others.
The promotion started on May 1, but the interest was so significant that the servers crashed, and the first cheap ticket was issued only after three days, reports the regional service "New Kaliningrad".
Alexei Besprizvannykh announced that the region will need a billion rubles (five times more than initially planned) for ticket subsidies, and this is being handled with Moscow. The discussion about cheap tickets and the airport may somewhat resemble the Polish disputes about the Central Communication Port. A blogger from the Telegram channel "Jantarnyj DLB" marked a post about the airport with a clown image. Readers criticized that it’s better to curb 10% inflation than to squander money.
Vladimir Putin's man cleans up
Putin's lieutenant is doubling his efforts to show what else will be handled with federal funding. Last week, he visited a rural doctor, where he criticized the peeling paint and falling tiles in the office. "A sad sight. I ordered the renovation process for family doctors to be expedited," he announced on his Telegram.
He reviewed the trolleybus depot, stating that the vehicles are worn out and new ones will be purchased. He visited a farming enterprise, where he announced a fight against the high prices of food products. "The culprits are electricity prices and supermarket margins," we read in the post.
He believes Russian tomatoes are tastier than imported ones. The official opened a breadcrumb factory and also announced that the car factory Avtodor (formerly brands KIA and BMW) will deliver electric cars throughout Russia.
The new acting governor probably aims to achieve a propaganda effect to improve public moods, comments Prof. Krzysztof Żęgota from the Institute of Political Science at the University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn in an interview with WP.
In reality, the Kaliningrad region is cut off from the rest of Russia, which drastically worsens the region's economic conditions. This affects both price levels and general economic indicators, explains Prof. Żęgota. He predicts that Besprizvannykh will likely participate in the governor elections (for now, he is acting) and wants to improve his chances of winning the vote.