Hegang
China
Hegang, Wade-Giles romanization Ho-kang, formerly Heligang, city, eastern Heilongjiang sheng (province), northeastern China. It is a prefecture-level municipality (shi) situated in the southeastern section of the Xiao Hinggan (Lesser Khingan) Range and is one of the principal coal-producing cities in China.
The Hegang mines were founded in 1916 by a Chinese entrepreneur with Russian capital. In 1926 a railway was built to Jiamusi, some 30 miles (50 km) to the south on the Sungari (Songhua) River. The mines were further developed after the Japanese occupation of Manchuria (Northeast China) in 1931–32. After 1949 the city experienced further rapid growth. The mines were extended and modernized, and their annual output was increased dramatically. Most of the coal is high-quality coking coal that is also used to make coal gas; apart from a small quantity consumed in Jiamusi, the bulk of it is shipped by rail to Anyang in Henan province and to other industrial cities in the southern Northeast region. By the late 1950s the coal industry employed more than 80 percent of the working population. Although the mines continued to be developed and output increased, by the early 1970s Hegang’s industrial activity was beginning to diversify, especially after a large thermal-power-generating installation was constructed. The variety of manufactures now includes chemicals, construction equipment and materials, machines, and paper. Pop. (2002 est.) 593,052.
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