Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Nation grapples with power outages as winter nears

- By Sam Mednick

KYIV, UKRAINE >> The decorative candles Yaroslav Vedmid bought more than a year ago were never meant to be lit, but the dried wax that now clings to them attests to how they’ve been used almost nightly, a consequenc­e of power cuts across Ukraine.

Seated at the dinner table with his wife in a village on the outskirts of the capital, Kyiv, the two can’t count the number of times they have eaten in the dark since Russian attacks triggered the blackouts beginning in early October. Moscow has openly declared its intention to target the country’s energy infrastruc­ture and drive the nation into the cold.

“When you’re relying on electricit­y, the worst thing is that you can’t plan … Psychologi­cally it’s very uncomforta­ble,” said Vedmid, a 44-year-old business owner in Bilohorodk­a.

The cuts are getting longer — nearly 12 hours of outages a day, he said.

Russia has destroyed about 40% of Ukraine’s energy infrastruc­ture, affecting 16 regions, according to the Ukrainian government.

The latest assault came Monday, when a massive barrage of Russian cruisemiss­ile and drone strikes hit Kyiv, Kharkiv and other cities, knocking out water and power supplies in apparent retaliatio­n for what Moscow alleged was a Ukrainian attack on its Black Sea fleet.

In Kyiv, some 80% of consumers in the city of 3 million were left without water because of damage to a power facility Monday. By Tuesday, water was fully restored, as well as some power. Kyiv region governor, Oleksiy Kuleba said that 20,000 apartments in the region remained without power.

The unpredicta­ble rolling blackouts are increasing as the government scrambles to stabilize the energy grid and repair the system ahead of winter. The cuts add another layer of angst and uncertaint­y to a population already struggling with the stress of nearly nine months of war.

To try to ease people’s burdens, energy companies are publishing daily schedules of when neighborho­ods won’t have power.

But it’s not consistent, especially as strikes intensify. Last week a power station in the central region was damaged, causing an emergency shutdown and prompting the government to warn residents of tougher and longer outages.

‘Indefinite period’

“Unfortunat­ely, the destructio­n and damage are serious,” Kyiv region Gov. Oleksiy Kuleba said in a Telegram post. “It is necessary to prepare for emergency power outages for an indefinite period,” he said.

Across the capital, residents are stocking up on heaters, blankets, warm clothing and power banks to charge electronic­s. While most say they are willing to bear the brunt of the blackouts for the sake of the war, the frequency and fluidity of the outages are taxing.

Starting Tuesday, the government planned to change the schedule of the Kyiv subway to include longer wait times to save energy.

On the day that the Associated Press visited Vedmid’s house in October, there was an unschedule­d five-hour power outage, then a scheduled one during dinner.

Every time the power shuts off, the family loses internet service. Because the village also has a weak phone network, the household is often unable to communicat­e with others.

Staring at his mobile phone, Vedmid shrugs. Google Maps isn’t working, and he doesn’t know how long it will take to reach the train station for a planned trip with his wife to the country.

But what concerns him most are the months ahead when temperatur­es could drop to minus 4 degrees. “My major fears are for (the) cold part of season, for winter, because right now it influences our comfort but doesn’t threaten our lives,” he said.

The family has ordered a generator, which should be installed by December, but demand has spiked and not everyone can afford to buy one or the fuel to run it. Diesel has doubled in price since the start of the war, local residents said.

A silver lining

Vedmid’s wife, Olena, said she reads more books rather than constantly refreshing the internet to see the latest war developmen­ts. It helps her feel less anxious.

If not for Russia’s incessant shelling and the lack of repair equipment, much of which must be imported, the damage could be restored within weeks, energy experts said.

“The main danger is repeated missile attacks,” said professor Gennadii Riabtsev, chief researcher on energy security at the National Institute for Strategic Studies. Residents of cities near the front lines, such as Mykolaiv, Zaporizhzh­ia and Kharkiv, will suffer the most from the outages, he said.

DTEK, Ukraine’s main energy company, said it has run out of equipment for repairs. The cost of the equipment runs into the hundreds of millions of dollars.

Russia is likely to continue the war into the winter, hoping to weaken Western support for Ukraine and “freeze Europe into surrender,” according to a report issued this week by the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank.

Residents near the front lines say they are bracing for conditions to get worse.

Mariia Chupinina was dealing with blackouts in Kharkiv even before the rolling outages began in the region this week. The woman who fosters orphaned children lives on the fifth floor of an apartment building and takes care of four babies who are less than 12 months old.

When there is no electricit­y, it is impossible to heat the apartment, and every time they leave, they have to walk down five flights of stairs in the dark, she told the AP by phone.

If Chupinina forgets to plan ahead, the babies won’t have anything to eat. “If you have not prepared, you don’t have time to fill the Thermos, and there’s no warm water or formula,” she said.

 ?? ANDREW KRAVCHENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Independen­ce Square at twilight in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Monday. Rolling blackouts are increasing as the government rushes to stabilise the energy grid and repair the system.
ANDREW KRAVCHENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Independen­ce Square at twilight in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Monday. Rolling blackouts are increasing as the government rushes to stabilise the energy grid and repair the system.

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