Kyiv restored two-thirds of its generating capacities after Russian missile attacks, official says.
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Become a member Support us just onceUkraine's capital, Kyiv, has restored two-thirds of its own generating capacities lost due to recent Russian attacks, Deputy Head of the Kyiv City State Administration Petro Pantelieiev said on July 6. The Russian strikes damaged more than half of the city's generating capacity, Pantelieiev added. In recent months, Russia has intensified its attacks against Ukraine's critical infrastructure in a renewed assault against the country's energy grid.
The Trypillia Thermal Power Plant was completely destroyed in a Russian strike on Ukrainian energy infrastructure on April 11. The plant is less than 30 kilometers south of Kyiv and was the main power supplier for Kyiv, Zhytomyr, and Cherkasy oblasts. "We are planning to decentralize the electricity and heat production system by building small and medium-sized thermal power plants," Pantelieiev said.
Russian attacks pushing Ukraine's energy system toward 'worst-case scenario,' largest private energy company says
Ukrainians could face up to 20 hours of blackouts a day under a "worst-case" scenario if the country cannot repair and properly defend its energy infrastructure from Russian attacks, Executive Director of Ukraine's largest privately-owned energy company DTEK Dmytro Sakharuk told the Kyiv Independent...
Local authorities are also developing a cluster of autonomous facilities to cope with a possible power outage, according to the official. "For example, all the city's hospitals are equipped with generators, more than a hundred boiler houses of the district heating system have generators, and 175 pump rooms can also be quickly connected to autonomous power sources," he added. As a result of the attacks on energy infrastructure, Ukraine began implementing rolling blackouts on May 15.
Due to dwindling energy supplies caused by Russian attacks, Ukraine's largest privately-owned energy provider, DTEK, has warned that Ukrainians may only have electricity for 6-7 hours per day in the upcoming winter. In a "worst-case" scenario in which Ukraine is unable to repair damaged energy facilities and prevent future attacks, Ukrainians could experience up to 20 hours of blackouts a day, DTEK Executive Director Dmytro Sakharuk told the Kyiv Independent in an interview on June 9.
The Counteroffensive: Meet the energy workers keeping Kyiv from darkness Editor's Note: This article was published by the twice-weekly newsletter "The Counteroffensive with Tim Mak" on June 27, 2024, and has been re-published by the Kyiv Independent with permission.
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