The Herald (South Africa)

Central European firms stake positions in Ukraine reconstruc­tion race

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Central European companies are scouting out locations, signing contracts and launching projects deep in war-torn Ukraine, seeking a foothold for future reconstruc­tion work that could be worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

While most current projects are focused on essential infrastruc­ture damaged or destroyed since Russia’s invasion in February last year, company executives and government officials anticipate a wave of investment once fighting ends.

“It will be precisely the countries unafraid to go to Ukraine now that will start from the front positions of the peloton” when reconstruc­tion began in earnest, Tomas Kopecny, the Czech government envoy for Ukraine reconstruc­tion, said.

The Czech government has pledged to spend 500m crowns (R438m) a year until 2025 to support firms seeking to work in the country and is helping its companies build contacts with Ukrainian officials via regional trade missions.

“Companies and government­s realise that the Ukrainian market will be a great opportunit­y for the future,” Kopecny, who expects revenues earned by Czech companies in Ukraine to increase several-fold in coming years, said.

“The reconstruc­tion of Ukraine, at least its first phase, is already under way.”

Reuters spoke with about a dozen company executives and government officials who detailed operations and plans in Ukraine even while the war, which has killed tens of thousands, caused millions to flee and flattened cities, continues.

The stakes are high. The cost of recovery is likely to be $411bn (R7.9-trillion), or 2.6 times Ukraine’s estimated 2022 GDP, according to a joint assessment by Ukraine and the World Bank.

Polish bank Pekao SA has estimated that reconstruc­tion could boost neighbouri­ng Poland’s economy by up to 189bn zlotys (R868bn), or about 3.8% of GDP.

“When the war ends, money will go to Ukraine and it will be a very large constructi­on market, maybe one of the largest in Europe,” Leszek Golabiecki, deputy CEO of Polish constructi­on firm Unibep, said.

Strong military and political support for Ukraine from the Czech Republic and Poland, countries dominated by Moscow during four decades of Communist rule, has helped their firms.

So has their similar culture and experience working in Ukraine.

Czech environmen­tal services firm Dekonta, which cleaned up sites after the Soviet military left in 1991, is searching for locations to build water treatment plants, supervisor­y board member Pavel Mothejl said. He recently visited the Dnipropetr­ovsk region, near the frontline in eastern Ukraine.

“We would like to do 11 water treatment stations and [are] preparing decontamin­ation projects for when the war ends,” Mothejl, whose firm has one project in progress and another in the pipeline, said.

“Wherever you go in the villages, there is demand.”

More than 2,300 Polish firms have sought to participat­e in reconstruc­tion projects as part of a Polish Investment and Trade Agency programme, mostly companies in constructi­on and building materials.

Poland was also in discussion­s with representa­tives from countries including South Korea, Japan and Great Britain to partner with Polish companies more familiar with Ukraine, the head of the statefunde­d agency’s Kyiv office, Karol Kubica, said.

“We are building relationsh­ips with local government­s because we want to start the reconstruc­tion from the bottom,” he said.

“The challenge is and will be how to safely send employees to carry out work.”

Foreign firms working in the country must deal with regular air raid sirens and some employ military consultant­s.

“We have an air raid alert app installed on our mobile phones,” Jaroslav Camfrla, a project manager for Czech healthcare company Block CRS, who has visited Ukraine to gauge demand for its sterile surgery wards and mobile hospital units, said.

Poland’s 530km border with Ukraine could make the country a natural logistics hub.

“We expect Polish products to be the first choice and we also have the advantage of transport costs because we are closer to Ukraine,” Krzysztof Krempec, president of fire protection system maker Mercor, said.

It is considerin­g increasing the capacity of its factory in Lviv, western Ukraine.

While many European firms see a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y, progress will depend on the ability of Ukraine’s authoritie­s to demonstrat­e transparen­cy, Wieslaw Nowak, CEO of Polish constructi­on company ZUE, said.

Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception­s Index puts Ukraine in 116th place, far below its EU neighbours.

Ukraine has prioritise­d efforts to tackle graft as it seeks accession to the EU.

“If there is no transparen­cy of economic processes, fair tenders, transparen­t spending and settlement of these funds, noone will invest in Ukraine,” Nowak said.

“This is the main challenge for Ukraine. ”—

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