Damage to substation in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
Substation equipment in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast has been damaged in an attack.
Substation equipment in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast has been damaged in an attack.
Drone attacks by the Ukrainian forces have hit two energy infrastructure targets within the Russian Federation.
The IAEA has confirmed the shutdown of a power unit at the South Ukraine NPP last week due to a transformer malfunction.
Three DTEK transformer substations in Holosiivskyi and Shevchenkivskyi districts of Kyiv were destroyed or damaged in an attack.
The transformer will benefit more than 65000 residents of the historical section of Odesa.
The city was left without electricity for 16 hours over the weekend.
The money will be used to finance the reconstruction of one of the substations by introducing an automated process control system.
The police and sappers were called to remove the device.
The substation powers Russian Railways traction substations, the Stanovaya oil pumping station and ensures transmission between power systems.
The transformer was donated by Latvia via EU Civil Protection & Humanitarian Aid.
The Trypilska power plant was the biggest energy facility near the capital with a capacity of 1800 MW.
There was damage to energy facilities were damaged in the Dnipro district and eastern regions.
A Russian drone attack has damaged the equipment of a high-voltage substation.
NPC Ukrenergo is starting the construction of three main power transmission lines this year.
Distribution system operators of DTEK Grids plan to invest UAH 4 billion ($103.7 million) in the power grids in Odesa, Dnipropetrovsk, Kyiv regions and Kyiv in 2024.
The 330 kV high-voltage power transmission line in Zaporizhia region was left disconnected from the Zaporizhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) due to hostilities and only one power line remains.
Ukraine Energy Support Fund has procured and deployed 18 current transformers financed by Germany’s contribution through KfW.
In the early hours of Friday, Russian drones attacked several regions of Ukraine and hit a substation.
Under the coordination of the Ministry of Energy, in January 2024, Ukraine received another batch of aid from Azerbaijan.
Overnight on January 29-30, Russia carried out an attack with Shahed loitering drones, and caused damage to equipment at one of Ukrenergo’s substations in central Ukraine.
Kyiv-based private energy holding company DTEK Group is looking to some of its European neighbors’ assistance with its plans to expand into markets beyond Ukraine.
Two main high-voltage transmission lines, damaged during the Russian night attack on 24-25 November, have already resumed operation without threat of power outages.
The second batch of humanitarian aid, consisting of electrical equipment, has been sent from Azerbaijan to Ukraine.
In the near future, transformers and solar panels from Japan will arrive in Ukraine, announced the Ukrainian Ministry of Energy.