From the DW:
“Russia: Summer means cold
showers”
(Many Russians have recourse to
more cumbersome methods of heating water when the supply cuts off)
Every summer, Russian households
have to do without hot water. For up to three weeks, everyone has to take cold
showers — even in the ultramodern city of Moscow, writes DW's Yuri Rescheto. "Modernization
has reached new heights in Russia: You can now access the schedule for your
building's hot-water shutdown online!" joke Muscovites. Meanwhile, they're
busy putting pots on the stove and preparing to heat their water. It's a stroke
of luck that, with the Russian capital currently sweltering in a heat wave,
people are happy to take cold showers. It makes the obligatory annual hot-water
shutdown less difficult to bear. But once the heat wave passes and Muscovites
want some pampering again, their yearning for hot water will increase, as will
the discomfort of their morning and evening ablutions.
Annual showering problems
(Water supply expert Svetlana
Razvorotneva says alternatives would be possible)
Every summer, for between 10 days
and three weeks, there is no hot water in Russia. It makes no difference
whether you live in the remotest corner of Khanty-Mansiysk or in the heart of
the glittering metropolis of Moscow: This is the normal, 21st-century Russian
reality. Only Westerners are surprised by it. Russians bear it with fortitude.
They know it has to be this way. But ... why? It all has to do with Russian
central heating, a relic from the Soviet era that still operates in all the
cities of the former USSR. This is a complex system of pipes several kilometers
(miles) long, connected to hydroelectric power plants around each city that
provide residential buildings with hot water. The water companies say that, in
order to ensure that the system will operate reliably in winter, it must be
maintained during the summer, and that it's only by doing this maintenance work
that they can detect all the cracks in the pipes. The water temperature in the
pipes is lowered to 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit), and the
pressure in them is increased. Leaks are located and repaired, then checked
again.
The Moscow Integrated Power Company
(MOEK) is responsible for doing this. It's even produced a cartoon explaining
to the city's residents why no hot water flows from their taps in the summer.
MOEK claims that it needs a minimum of 10 days to inspect the pipes and that
unfortunately, it is still not possible to reduce the time the hot water is
turned off in order to do this. Not now, or in the foreseeable future, says the
company. "Not necessarily!" say independent experts who contradict
Moscow's official energy suppliers. "From a purely technical point of
view, Moscow can avoid cutting off the hot water," says Svetlana
Razvorotneva, an expert from the non-profit association National Center for
Public Control in the Field of Housing and Communal Services. "For
example, new residential districts are already connected to alternative heating
supply routes inside the buildings, so there are other, alternative water pipes
that could certainly be used as a substitute during repairs," she
explains.
New apartment, old system
(Maxim Mikhnenko has spent a lot
on an alternative heating system)
One person who would be in a
position to enjoy the benefits of an alternative hot water supply route in one
of these new residential districts is Maxim Mikhnenko, a young Muscovite. He
bought an apartment in a new business-class property segment a few years ago.
His neighborhood has round-the-clock security, underground parking, various
stores, restaurants and a gym with a swimming pool. The only thing is ... every
year, just as everywhere else in the city, the hot water is switched off. "Obviously
I don't heat my shower water with a kettle," says Maxim. "Instead,
I've had to pay a lot of money to install a water tank with heating
function." He complains that, unfortunately, the price of a property in
Russia is not a reflection of its quality. Russian households are effectively
forced to endure the hot-water shutdown because the procedure is incorporated
into the technical standards, explains Svetlana Razvorotneva. "We have
technical safety standards that are put in place to prevent accidents. And
according to these, precautionary checks must be done annually. So it makes no
difference what year a house was built: Everyone has to put up with this inconvenience
for the sake of safety," she explains.
What to do in the weeks of no
hot water? But the district heating system does also have advantages. It's
cheaper because heat is delivered in large quantities simultaneously all across
the city. Smaller, individual heaters are more expensive for consumers both to
purchase and to maintain. As the hot-water shutdown period approaches,
the local media are full of tips on how to get through it: from conventional
methods, like heating water in a kettle, to more innovative ones, like how to
do it in a washing machine. It's also suggested that the lack of hot water is a
good reason to visit friends in another residential district and take a shower
at their place, or all go together to a banya, or Russian sauna. Or, of course,
you could simply quit the apartment altogether and go on vacation.
^ I remember having to suffer
through only cold water for everything (it was more like living in the 1800s
rather than the 2000s.) It is not fun and adds to the many hardships of living
in Russia. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/russia-summer-means-cold-showers/a-58255774
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