Ukraine scrambles for energy with power generation at ‘zero’

Ukraine scrambles for energy with power generation at ‘zero’
A car passes next to residential buildings during a power blackout after critical civil infrastructure was hit by Russian missile and drone attacks, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine. (Reuters)
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Ukraine scrambles for energy with power generation at ‘zero’

Ukraine scrambles for energy with power generation at ‘zero’
  • Russian attacks interrupted electricity, heat and water supplies in several cities, with state power firm Centerenergo warning generating capacity “is down to zero”

KYIV: Ukraine was scrambling to turn lights and heating back on Sunday after Russian attacks targeting energy infrastructure reduced the country’s power generating capacity to “zero.”
Moscow, which has escalated attacks on Ukraine’s infrastructure in recent months, launched hundreds of drones at energy facilities across the country overnight into Saturday.
The attacks interrupted electricity, heat and water supplies in several cities, with state power firm Centerenergo warning generating capacity “is down to zero.”
Power would be cut for between eight to 16 hours a day across most regions of Ukraine on Sunday, state provider Ukrenergo said, while repairs were carried out and energy sourcing diverted.
While the situation had somewhat stabilized, regions including Kyiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Poltava, Chernigiv and Sumy could continue to see regular power cuts, Ukraine’s energy minister said Saturday evening.
“The enemy inflicted a massive strike with ballistic missiles, which are extremely difficult to shoot down. It is hard to recall such a number of direct strikes on energy facilities since the beginning of the invasion,” Svitlana Grynchuk told local broadcaster United News.
Russian drones had targeted two nuclear power substations deep in western Ukraine, Kyiv’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said, calling on the UN’s nuclear watchdog to respond.
The substations powered the Khmelnytskyi and Rivne nuclear plants, around 120 and 95 kilometers (75 and 59 miles) respectively from Lutsk, he said.
“Russia is deliberately endangering nuclear safety in Europe. We call for an urgent meeting of the IAEA Board of Governors to respond to these unacceptable risks,” he wrote on Telegram late Saturday, referring to the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Sybiha also urged China and India — traditionally large buyers of Russian oil — to pressure Moscow to cease its attacks.

- Winter without heat? -

Experts have said the strikes on energy infrastructure puts Ukraine at risk of heating outages ahead of the winter months.
Russia has targeted the power and heating grid throughout its almost four-year invasion, destroying a large part of the key civilian infrastructure.
The barrage overnight into Saturday was the ninth massive attack on gas infrastructure since early October, Ukraine’s energy company Naftogaz said.
Kyiv’s School of Economics estimated in a report that the attacks shut down half of Ukraine’s natural gas production.
Ukraine’s top energy expert, Oleksandr Kharchenko, told a media briefing Wednesday that if Kyiv’s two power and heating plants went offline for more than three days when temperatures fall below minus 10C, the capital would face a “technological disaster.”
Ukraine has in turn stepped up strikes on Russian oil depots and refineries in recent months, seeking to cut off Moscow’s vital energy exports and trigger fuel shortages across the country.


After six months, German’s Merz faces mounting woes

Updated 2 sec ago

After six months, German’s Merz faces mounting woes

After six months, German’s Merz faces mounting woes
BERLIN: After just six months in power, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s coalition is facing infighting, policy deadlock and sliding poll ratings, undermining its efforts to take on the rising far right.
It marks a difficult start for the conservative politician who ran on bold pledges of reviving the stagnant economy, overhauling the threadbare military and toughening immigration policy after years of drift under the previous government.
In German post-war politics, “there has never been such widespread dissatisfaction with a government in such a short period of time,” Manfred Guellner, director of the Forsa polling institute, told AFP.
For Germans who hoped for more decisive leadership after the last government’s collapse, “their expectations have been dashed,” he said.
The winners of February’s general election, Merz’s center-right CDU/CSU bloc now find themselves neck-and-neck in the polls with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which came second in the poll and is now the largest opposition party.
Merz’s junior coalition partners, the center-left Social Democrats (SPD) of ex-chancellor Olaf Scholz, have seen their popularity slide further after a terrible election performance, and now sit around 13-15 percent in polls.
“It is clear that many citizens are dissatisfied or disappointed with the government’s work so far,” Roderich Kiesewetter, an MP from Merz’s Christian Democrats (CDU), told AFP.
The government appeared to be “focusing only on migration instead of the economy, education and security,” he said.

- Increasing tensions -

There have been increasing tensions between the ruling parties in Berlin since Merz failed to be elected chancellor in the first round of voting in parliament in early May, a first in post-war Germany.
In July they were unable to agree on the appointment of three judges to the constitutional court, with the conservatives considering the Social Democrats’ candidate too left-wing.
A group of young conservative MPs revolted over a pension reform proposal, which had already been adopted by the cabinet, arguing that it burdened future generations.
Meanwhile, an overhaul of the country’s military service system, which was supposed to demonstrate Germany’s leadership in NATO in the face of the Russian threat, has turned into a stalemate over whether to bring back a limited form of conscription.
Now Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, a close confidant of Merz, is under fire from conservatives for expressing reservations about the possibility of sending back Syrian refugees living in Germany.
With their support so low after the February polls, the CDU/CSU and the SPD “are finding it more difficult to reach compromises,” Aiko Wagner, a political scientist at the Free University of Berlin, told AFP. Both sides fear they “will become even weaker among their own” supporters if they do, said Wagner.

- Tough migration rhetoric -

The coalition’s own struggles are making it more difficult for Merz to counter the rise of the AfD, which he declared as his party’s “main opponent” ahead of five regional elections scheduled for 2026.
Merz has used increasingly tough rhetoric on immigration to counter the AfD, such as a controversial statement in October about the problems of the “German urban cityscape” — seen as criticism of the impact of migrants on cities.
But this offended many Social Democrats, as well as some moderates among his conservative bloc.
Guellner argued that Merz made “a fatal mistake” by focusing so much on migration when the struggling economy was the main concern of many voters.
The AfD meanwhile sees Merz’s struggles as an opportunity.
A clear majority of Germans backed conservative or right-wing parties in the election, AfD MP Sebastian Muenzenmaier told AFP.
But Merz’s coalition with the center-left appears incapable of delivering on his promises, he said.
“No one sees this government staying in power for four years,” said Muenzenmaier, who predicted that the AfD would have strong showings in next years’ state elections.
“Many believe that at the end of next year, after the elections, the situation will become very difficult for the government in Berlin and that it will collapse.”
The prospect of another coalition crisis and early elections did not sit well with Stephanie and Bernd Nebel, two visitors to Berlin from Munich who spoke with AFP outside of the Reichstag, the seat of Germany’s parliament.
The biggest problem with the coalition so far, Bernd Nebel said, was that Merz’s government “made it their mission to boost the economic recovery a little — and absolutely nothing has happened in that regard.”