POLITICIAN

Alexander Novak

1971 - Today

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Alexander Valentinovich Novak (Russian: Александр Валентинович Новак; born 23 August 1971 in Avdiivka, Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine SSR) is a Russian politician who is a current Deputy Prime Minister of Russia since November 2020. Previously, he was the Minister of Energy of Russia between 2012 and 2020, before being replaced in November 2020 by the general director of RusHydro, Nikolay Shulginov. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 16 different languages on Wikipedia. Alexander Novak is the 18,567th most popular politician, the 1,119th most popular biography from Ukraine and the 231st most popular Ukrainian Politician.

Alexander Novak is a Russian politician best known for serving as the Minister of Energy of the Russian Federation since 2012, where he has played a significant role in shaping Russia's energy policy and its relations with global oil markets. He is also recognized for his involvement in OPEC+ negotiations aimed at regulating oil production levels.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1971, Alexander Novak ranks 700Before him are Bobby Julich, Oleg Novitsky, David Wagner, Chandra Sturrup, Petr Nedvěd, and Lilian Laslandes. After him are Amanda Detmer, Hiep Thi Le, Mladen Rudonja, Vadym Gutzeit, Gülse Birsel, and Brent Renaud.

Others Born in 1971

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In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Alexander Novak ranks 1,120 out of 1,365Before him are Mariana Sadovska (1972), Maryna Bekh-Romanchuk (1995), Andriy Kalashnikov (1964), Dasha Astafieva (1985), Anatoliy Trubin (2001), Nadiia Kichenok (1992), and Andriy Rusol (1983). After him are Andriy Melnyk (1975), Olena Kondratiuk (1970), Vadym Gutzeit (1971), Anastasia Prikhodko (1987), and Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze (1972).

Among POLITICIANS In Ukraine

Among politicians born in Ukraine, Alexander Novak ranks 231Before him are Serhiy Arbuzov (1976), Dmytro Razumkov (1983), Illia Kyva (1977), Pavel Gubarev (1983), Oleg Tsaryov (1970), and Ze'ev Elkin (1971). After him are Andriy Melnyk (1975), Olena Kondratiuk (1970), Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze (1972), Tatiana Turanskaya (1972), Vasyl Tsushko (1963), and Natalia Korolevska (1975).