Geographic Features
Estonia is a low, flat country covering 45,226 square kilometers. It
is about the size of Vermont and New Hampshire combined. Estonia has a
long, shallow coastline (1,393 kilometers) along the Baltic Sea, with
1,520 islands dotting the shore. The two largest islands are Saaremaa
(literally, island land), at 2,673 square kilometers, and Hiiumaa, at
989 square kilometers. The two islands are favorite Estonian vacation
spots. The country's highest point, Suur Munam�gi (Egg Mountain), is in
the hilly southeast and reaches 318 meters above sea level. Estonia is
covered by about 1.8 million hectares of forest. Arable land amounts to
about 926,000 hectares. Meadows cover about 252,000 hectares, and
pastureland covers about 181,000 hectares. There are more than 1,400
natural and artificial lakes in Estonia. The largest of them, Lake
Peipsi (3,555 square kilometers), forms much of the border between
Estonia and Russia. Located in central Estonia, V�rtsj�rv is the
second-largest lake (270 square kilometers). The Narva and Emaj�gi are
among the most important of the country's many rivers.
Estonia has a temperate climate, with four seasons of near-equal
length. Average temperatures range from 16.3�C on the Baltic islands to
17.1�C inland in July, the warmest month, and from -3.5�C on the
Baltic islands to -7.6�C inland in February, the coldest month.
Precipitation averages 568 millimeters per year and is heaviest in late
summer.
Estonia's land border with Latvia runs 267 kilometers; the Russian
border runs 290 kilometers. From 1920 to 1945, Estonia's border with
Russia, set by the 1920 Tartu Peace Treaty, extended beyond the Narva
River in the northeast and beyond the town of Pechory (Petseri) in the
southeast (see fig. 2). This territory, amounting to some 2,300 square
kilometers, was incorporated into Russia by Stalin at the end of World
War II. Estonia is now disputing that territorial loss (see Relations
with Russia, this ch.).
Estonia - Environmental Issues
One of the most burdensome legacies of the Soviet era is widespread
environmental pollution. The worst offender in this regard was the
Soviet army. Across military installations covering more than 80,000
hectares of Estonian territory, the army dumped hundreds of thousands of
tons of jet fuel into the ground, improperly disposed of toxic
chemicals, and discarded outdated explosives and weapons in coastal and
inland waters. In the 1990s, during the army's withdrawal from Estonia,
extensive damage was done to discarded buildings and equipment. In
October 1993, the Estonian Ministry of Environment issued a preliminary
report summing up part of the degradation it had surveyed thus far. The
report described the worst damage as having been done to Estonia's
topsoil and underground water supply by the systematic dumping of jet
fuel at six Soviet army air bases. At the air base near Tapa, site of
the worst damage, officials estimated that six square kilometers of land
were covered by a layer of fuel; eleven square kilometers of underground
water were said to be contaminated. The water in the surrounding area
was undrinkable. With Danish help, Estonian crews began cleaning up the
site, although they estimated the likely cost to be as much as EKR4
million. The Ministry of Environment assigned a monetary cost of more
than EKR10 billion to the damage to the country's topsoil and water
supply. However, the ministry was able to allocate only EKR5 million in
1993 for cleanup operations.
In a 1992 government report to the United Nations Conference on the
Environment and Development, Estonia detailed other major environmental
concerns. For instance, for several consecutive years Estonia had led
the world in the production of sulfur dioxide per capita. Nearly 75
percent of Estonia's air pollution was reported to come from two oil
shale-based thermal power stations operating near Narva. The mining of
oil shale in northeastern Estonia also left gigantic mounds of limestone
dotting the region. Near the town of Sillam�e, site of a former uranium
enrichment plant, about 1,200 tons of uranium and about 750 tons of
thorium had been dumped into the Gulf of Finland. This was said to have
caused severe health problems among area residents. In the coastal town
of Paldiski, the removal of waste left by Soviet army nuclear reactors
was also a major concern. The combined cost of environmental cleanup at
both towns was put at more than EKR3.5 billion.
Society