Ministry: Power line supplying Chornobyl power station shut down due to damage in Belarus.

The 330 kV power line that supplies the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant was shut down due to damage that occurred on the territory of Belarus, Ukraine's Energy Ministry said[1] on Aug.

15. Over the past day, the main power lines of Ukraine's state-owned energy operator Ukrenergo have been shut down three times, the ministry said. In Lviv Oblast, almost 290,000 residents were left without electricity for a short time due to a blackout of a 330 kV line.

The reasons for the incident are being clarified, the ministry said. As a result of Russian missile strikes[2] against Lviv overnight, three 0.4 kV power lines were also damaged, disconnecting around 100 residents, the report added. An overhead power line in Kyiv Oblast was also shut down due to a fallen tree, and a 220 kV substation in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast was turned off because of equipment damage, the ministry reported.

The Chornobyl power station was a site of a major nuclear disaster in 1986. The radiation leakage caused by the accident led to the creation of a restricted area known as the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone. The plant is currently undergoing decommissioning.

The station was briefly occupied by Russian forces in the spring of 2022 during Russia's push toward Kyiv. Belarus claimed[3] that during the Russian occupation, the Belarusian energy system was supplying electricity to the Chornobyl station.

Belarus Weekly: Sanctions, new passports, as Belarusians mark third anniversary of stolen election Tensions mount between Belarus, Poland, and Lithuania amid the growing presence of Wagner mercenaries and the Belarusian military's exercises near their shared borders.

Warsaw and Vilnius accuse Minsk of engineering a renewed migrant influx by forcefully funneling asylum seekers to the border....

[4] Martin Fornusek

News Editor

Martin Fornusek is a news editor at the Kyiv Independent. He has previously worked as a news content editor at the media company Newsmatics and is a contributor to Euromaidan Press. He also volunteers as an editor and translator at the Czech-language version of Ukrainer.

Martin studied at Masaryk University in Brno, Czechia, holding a bachelor's degree in security studies and history and a master's degree in conflict and democracy studies.

References

  1. ^ said (www.mev.gov.ua)
  2. ^ missile strikes (kyivindependent.com)
  3. ^ claimed (www.rferl.org)
  4. ^ Belarus Weekly: Sanctions, new passports, as Belarusians mark third anniversary of stolen electionTensions mount between Belarus, Poland, and Lithuania amid the growing presence of Wagner mercenaries and the Belarusian military's exercises near their shared borders.

    Warsaw and Vilnius accuse Minsk of engineering a renewed migrant influx by forcefully funneling asylum seekers to the border.... (kyivindependent.com)