Sabit Orudschow

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Sabit Orudschow ( Azerbaijani Sabit Ata oğlu Orucov; Russian Сабит Атаевич Оруджев * 18th May 1912 in Baku , Government Baku , Russian Empire ; † 20th April 1981 in Moscow , Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic , USSR ) was a Soviet statesman Azerbaijani descent, Minister of Oil and Gas of the USSR and Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of the Azerbaijani SSR (now the National Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan ).

Career

Orudschow was born into a working class family in Baku. After graduating from school, he worked as a teacher in a small village school for several years from 1928. In 1936 he graduated from the Azerbaijan Industry University (now Azerbaijan State Oil and Industry University ). In the same year Orudschow began to work as a mechanic in the compression station of the trust "Ordschonikidseneft", which was specialized in the oil production. By 1939, in just a few years, he worked his way up from a simple master assistant to the manager of the aforementioned production facility. At the same time he worked as deputy head of the "Azneft" association, to which some large trust companies such as " Stalin neft" and "Buzovnaneft" belonged.

In 1946 Orudschow was sent to Krasnodar by the Soviet leadership , where he was employed as a chief engineer in the "Krasnodarfneft" association. In 1949 he moved to the Ministry of Oil Industry of the USSR and was appointed head of administration for the exploration and development of offshore oil fields. From 1953 to 1955, Orudschow was director of oil production in the western regions of the USSR before he was promoted to deputy head of the Ministry of Oil Industry. Between 1957 and 1959 he held the position of Chairman of the National Economic Council and Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Azerbaijan SSR.

In 1960–1962, Orudschow was the permanent representative of Azerbaijan at the Council of Ministers of the USSR .

In January 1962 Orudschow was ordered to Moscow, where he was entrusted with the role of deputy chairman of the State Committee of the Soviet Council of Ministers for the Fuel Industry. In 1963 he took on another deputy position in the State Planning Committee of the USSR for the chemical and petroleum industry.

Ordushov reached another high point in his professional career in October 1965 when he was appointed first deputy minister for the oil industry in the USSR.

In June 1970 Orudschow became the first deputy of the Minister for Oil and Gas of the USSR before he was awarded the ministerial post in September 1972. He remained at the head of this ministry until his death in April 1981.

Awards

  • Third Class Stalin Prize (1950) - for developing and implementing an efficient process for increasing oil production
  • First Class Stalin Prize (1951) - for the discovery and development of new offshore oil fields.
  • Lenin Prize (1970) - for merits in designing high-performance technological solutions that contributed to increased oil production in Tyumen Oblast .

souvenir

One of the central streets in Baku and a street in Alexandrowsk Raion of Tomsk Oblast are named after Orudschow.

A memorial was erected in honor of Orudschow in the city of Novy Urengoy in the Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Okrug.

In Moscow, a memorial plaque was placed on the exterior of the building where Orudschow lived.

In the Uzbek city ​​of Khiva , a Russian school bears the name of Orudschow.

Individual evidence

  1. Сабит Оруджев: от мастера до министра и ученого. June 17, 2018, Retrieved March 7, 2019 (Russian).
  2. «Сабит Оруджев - легендарный министр, выдающийся человек». Журнал “Газпром” № 5, 2012, accessed March 7, 2019 (Russian).
  3. ОТ МАСТЕРА ДО МИНИСТРА. “Газпром межрегионгаз Санкт-Петербург”, accessed on March 7, 2019 (Russian).
  4. Фатех Вергасов: Оруджев Сабит Атаевич. Retrieved March 7, 2019 (Russian).
  5. Саби́т Ата́евич Ору́джев. Геро́й Социалисти́ческого Труда́. Герои страны, accessed March 7, 2019 (Russian).
  6. Оруджев Сабит Атаевич - нефтяник, министр газовой промышленности СССР. Энциклопедия / "Неизвестные" бакинцы, accessed March 7, 2019 (Russian).