Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike

EUR -
AED 4.372834
AFN 77.994424
ALL 96.331465
AMD 448.709897
ANG 2.131441
AOA 1091.270068
ARS 1667.576826
AUD 1.680978
AWG 2.146229
AZN 2.016587
BAM 1.955432
BBD 2.397139
BDT 145.592598
BGN 1.999619
BHD 0.449112
BIF 3527.506472
BMD 1.190696
BND 1.506804
BOB 8.224349
BRL 6.189946
BSD 1.190171
BTN 107.754267
BWP 15.613668
BYN 3.419142
BYR 23337.639684
BZD 2.393639
CAD 1.611476
CDF 2631.438409
CHF 0.90999
CLF 0.025761
CLP 1017.187351
CNY 8.228721
CNH 8.227792
COP 4353.636683
CRC 588.984202
CUC 1.190696
CUP 31.553441
CVE 110.242863
CZK 24.24376
DJF 211.940111
DKK 7.471914
DOP 74.595334
DZD 154.165338
EGP 55.716943
ERN 17.860439
ETB 184.757227
FJD 2.608337
FKP 0.871257
GBP 0.871238
GEL 3.203233
GGP 0.871257
GHS 13.09737
GIP 0.871257
GMD 87.511768
GNF 10447.858144
GTQ 9.127167
GYD 249
HKD 9.308259
HNL 31.450949
HRK 7.529125
HTG 156.117995
HUF 378.117426
IDR 19944.156362
ILS 3.66208
IMP 0.871257
INR 107.869068
IQD 1559.086927
IRR 50158.065069
ISK 145.002627
JEP 0.871257
JMD 186.214171
JOD 0.844181
JPY 183.871425
KES 153.411127
KGS 104.12625
KHR 4798.504967
KMF 492.948664
KPW 1071.629947
KRW 1735.498472
KWD 0.365419
KYD 0.991801
KZT 585.552418
LAK 25558.901695
LBP 106575.561413
LKR 368.26605
LRD 221.967292
LSL 18.959693
LTL 3.515816
LVL 0.72024
LYD 7.503588
MAD 10.850021
MDL 20.142955
MGA 5269.008334
MKD 61.62866
MMK 2500.636925
MNT 4251.409725
MOP 9.583676
MRU 46.782802
MUR 54.391445
MVR 18.408351
MWK 2063.711594
MXN 20.521793
MYR 4.671694
MZN 75.918431
NAD 18.959693
NGN 1619.596236
NIO 43.801388
NOK 11.323446
NPR 172.407552
NZD 1.967005
OMR 0.457831
PAB 1.190161
PEN 3.996548
PGK 5.106018
PHP 69.634248
PKR 332.93985
PLN 4.21651
PYG 7833.525673
QAR 4.338229
RON 5.090817
RSD 117.388364
RUB 92.09719
RWF 1737.680253
SAR 4.465897
SBD 9.590911
SCR 16.382242
SDG 716.209167
SEK 10.592169
SGD 1.50545
SHP 0.89333
SLE 29.023166
SLL 24968.296849
SOS 679.926489
SRD 45.115489
STD 24645.00117
STN 24.49539
SVC 10.413909
SYP 13168.590508
SZL 18.940958
THB 37.165783
TJS 11.169557
TMT 4.167436
TND 3.428711
TOP 2.86691
TRY 51.955843
TTD 8.072379
TWD 37.522761
TZS 3067.348152
UAH 51.258253
UGX 4231.150364
USD 1.190696
UYU 45.640835
UZS 14663.301833
VES 458.168364
VND 30821.163429
VUV 142.646039
WST 3.231182
XAF 655.833567
XAG 0.014535
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.217915
XCG 2.144969
XDR 0.815646
XOF 655.833567
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.802267
ZAR 18.974347
ZMK 10717.685994
ZMW 22.642643
ZWL 383.403595
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.5300

    17.41

    +3.04%

  • RIO

    -0.5400

    96.31

    -0.56%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0050

    23.59

    +0.02%

  • NGG

    0.0500

    88.44

    +0.06%

  • GSK

    -0.0600

    58.95

    -0.1%

  • RELX

    0.1950

    29.675

    +0.66%

  • AZN

    6.1880

    194.198

    +3.19%

  • BTI

    -1.5000

    59.65

    -2.51%

  • VOD

    -0.1510

    15.329

    -0.99%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.82

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    1.1500

    90.17

    +1.28%

  • BCE

    0.3450

    25.965

    +1.33%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    23.99

    +0.08%

  • BP

    -2.5400

    36.68

    -6.92%

'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike
'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike / Photo: Genya SAVILOV - AFP

'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike

Russia had been widely expected to launch a massive strike on Ukraine, but the evening crew at one of the country's frequently targeted power stations could do nothing to prepare.

Text size:

Hours later, two missiles slammed into the plant, finishing off the destruction of a unit already ravaged in an earlier bombardment.

It is just one of the sites decimated by the most intense wave of Russian attacks on Ukraine's energy grid of the four-year war.

Kyiv and its allies accuse Moscow of trying to plunge Ukraine into a humanitarian crisis, cutting off electricity, heating and water to civilians with temperatures touching multi-year lows of minus 20C in Kyiv.

Days after the recent strike, in a visit to the undisclosed facility by AFP, the air still smelled burnt.

A frozen crow was encased in the snow. Stray dogs roamed the wreckage, weaving between huge charred twisted pipes and silent idle turbines.

The site -- now resembling a post-industrial wasteland -- has been wiped out by multiple Russian strikes.

It is unclear when, or if, production can be restored there.

"I would like to say months, but it will probably take years," said Oleksandr, 53, head of the production management department.

AFP reporters visited the plant, run by private operator DTEK, as part of rare press access to a site Ukraine considers critical infrastructure. The location and full names of most employees can not be revealed.

- 'Crying' -

"I've worked at this plant for 27 years, I just feel like crying," said Volodymyr, a 53-year-old shift supervisor.

His team was working the night of the most recent strikes.

"Hundreds of workers and engineers are here around the clock, day and night, to repair as much as possible," said DTEK's communications manager Oleksandr Kutereshchyn.

AFP saw excavators scooping debris, and dozens of first responders and employees clearing rubble.

Since Russia invaded in 2022, Ukraine's energy infrastructure has been attacked more than 220 times, according to Kyiv.

The International Criminal Court in 2024 issued arrest warrants for top Russian military figures over the missile attacks on power plants, which the court's prosecutors said constituted a war crime.

Ukrainians have termed their own word for the barrage -- "Kholodomor", a reference to the Holodomor, the 1930s famine orchestrated by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin that Kyiv considers a genocide.

Literally, it translates as "death by cold".

- 'Our life' -

The attacks do more than just knock out the power -- they also sap the morale, particularly of the communities of workers and families that have been built around the plants.

When Russia last struck, "the guys came right away to help -- even those who were off or on vacation," Volodymyr told AFP.

"This is our life, you understand?"

Ania, 22, who lives in the nearby town said her mother has worked for 30 years as an administrator with DTEK.

"All these people have spent half their lives working there. And now everything is destroyed," she told AFP.

Restaurant manager Veronika, 24, is getting tired of the electricity only turning on for 60-minute stints every six hours.

Her aunt works at the the plant, which is located behind a forest that backs on to her house."Of course it's frightening," when Russia attacks, she said.

But she is determined.

"You end up getting used to it. The most important thing is that people, children, don't suffer. Metal can be rebuilt. Even if some say everything is ruined, that's not true."

She added: "The plant's chimneys are still standing, and so are we."

J.Hasler--NZN