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Stroĭtransgaz (Russia)

Стройтрансгаз

Last modified: 2025-04-12 by rob raeside
Keywords: stroĭtransgaz |
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image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 28 March 2025


See also:

Overview

The official name of this company, as a standalone entity, is АО "Стройтрансгаз", short form of Акционерное общество "Стройтрансгаз", while its holding company group is ОАО "Стройтрансгаз", short for Открытое акционерное общество "Стройтрансгаз". More about this company in several Wikipedias: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stroytransgaz or https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki

It is an engineering construction company in the field of oil and gas industry founded in 1990 within the giant Gazprom and it’s currently owned by the Luxembourgish entity Volga Group, an investment vehicle. Its contracts for the Russian military earned this company its inclusion in the Specially Designated Nationals List of the U.S. Department of the Treasury (for now, at least).
António Martins-Tuválkin, 28 March 2025


The Flag

This flag can be seen at https://youtu.be/rE2qiOQJisU?t=294 (time stamp 04′54″ of a documentary about the Russian presence in Assad’s Syria). It is a plain dark blue flag with the company logo centered on it, its name underneath, centered across the bottom. The logo consists of white extra bold serifless dotless initials "СТГ" (translit.: "STG") between two slightly ascending quadrangular orange strokes, above and below; company name (short form) underneath in a very light weight of the same typeface, capitalized properly: "Стройтрансгаз" (translit.: "Stroĭtransgaz").

The shade of blue in digital files available at the official website https://www.stroytransgaz.ru/static/img/logo.svg (also mirrored in https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:STG_Logo.svg. Wikimedia Commons) is darker and more tealish than what the mentioned footage in Syria suggests; the image abvoe uses the RGB values officially available (blue 002C43 and orange E94900), pending better research.

As usual for Russian companies, a Latin script variant of the logo exists (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Stroytransgaz_logo.png) usually meant for use, at least, in foreign locations where the Latin script is locally prevalent - explaining this Cyrillic flag in Syria. While I didn’t find any Latin variants of this flag, they likely exist. The reverse of this lettering logo flag, as usual, is very likely an unreadable non-mirrored image, at least on thin material printed flags meant for outdoors eolic hoisting.

António Martins-Tuválkin, 28 March 2025