‘Energy genocide’: Ukraine pleads for urgent help as Russia blitz on infrastructure grows
Russia is
committing “energy genocide” by bombing nearly half of Ukraine’s power
infrastructure, the government has said as Ukrainian officials warned the
damage could spark Europe’s worst humanitarian catastrophe since the Second
World War.
Speaking to
The Independent, energy minister German Galushchenko said Russia wanted to “sow
darkness and despair” with daily “en masse” strikes on the electricity supply
chain, which together with the occupation of facilities, has left many without
power.
He said at
least 40 per cent of its total energy infrastructure has been damaged,
including massive destruction to green generation facilities.
In total, 90
per cent of Ukraine’s wind generation and 40 per cent of their solar power
capacity has been decommissioned, he added.
Mr
Galushchenko spoke as Ukrainian energy officials warned the wave of strikes
since 10 October was likely the “largest attack on energy infrastructure in
history”.
They said
the situation was so critical that Ukraine has had to stop providing
electricity to the European Union, exports which had been helping Europe to
replace Russian energy resources.
“Russia
cannot win on the battlefield by giving in to our armed forces, so it has
decided to go down the path of energy genocide,” Mr Galushchenko said.
“The
Russians are intentionally attacking our energy facilities right now, when the
cold has started and energy supply is of particular value to citizens. Their
plan is to sow not only darkness but also despair among Ukrainians.”
He urged the
country’s Western partners to provide more air defence systems that could be
deployed specifically to protect energy and nuclear facilities.
“We fight for [Europe] too. And we hope that
your support will continue because our skies still need protection,” he
implored.
Ukraine’s
energy companies also sounded the alarm.
Volodymyr
Kudrytskyi, chairman of Ukrenergo, Ukraine’s grid operator, told The
Independent the barrage of strikes was the “biggest attack on energy
infrastructure in history”.
“The scale
of these attacks is unseen in the world,” he said. “We are speaking about
hundreds of missiles launched specifically at electricity transmission
infrastructure. I cannot remember any other instance [where] we have seen such
a scale of destruction.”
Meanwhile,
Antonina Antosha, from DTEK, the largest private energy investor in Ukraine
which controls multiple power plants, warned the damage will leave millions of
people in the country without light and heat, sparking “the biggest
humanitarian disaster since 1945”.
“We are
convinced that this is only the beginning and that attacks on other objects
will continue. The craziest scenario is an attack on a nuclear power plant,”
she added.
Ukraine has
been plunged into darkness by an unprecedented wave of Russian strikes on the
energy grid, right as a bitter winter approaches.
Moscow has
repeatedly acknowledged targeting energy infrastructure but denies targeting
civilians or violating international law since President Putin launched his
invasion of the country in February.
However,
Amnesty International and other rights groups have said the attacks on the
facilities could amount to war crimes.
“The Russian
army clearly intends to undermine industrial production, disrupt
transportation, sow fear and despair and deprive civilians in Ukraine of heat,
electricity and water as the cold grip of winter approaches,” said Marie
Struthers, the group’s Eastern Europe and Central Asia director.
“The morale
of the civilian population is not a lawful target, and carrying out these
attacks with the sole purpose of terrorising civilians is a war crime,” she
added.
President
Zelensky has personally appealed to citizens to reduce energy consumption, as
scheduled four-hour power cuts have been rolled out across the country to
stabilise the embattled grid.
The energy
ministry said that civilians had responded to the call already, reducing
consumption nationally by up to 10 per cent. But that is still not enough to
halt needed planned power cuts which are expected to get much longer, with Kyiv
officials warning citizens last week to brace for up to a week without power.
The pressure
on the system has become so severe deputy prime minister Iryna Vereshchuk urged
Ukrainian refugees to stay away.
In a TV
interview on Tuesday, Ms Vereshchuk told Ukrainians currently sheltering abroad
that they should wait until spring before returning home.
She said the
grid “won’t survive” the return of refugees from abroad, and that the situation
would “only get worse”.
Mr
Galushchenko told The Independent a major part of the problem they were facing
was that after they carried out repair and restoration work, sites would often
be bombed again.
At least 54
workers in the energy industry have been killed, often in double-tap attacks on
electricity distribution systems, trunk networks, substations and thermal
generation, Mr Galushchenko said.
“The enemy’s
goal is to make it difficult to reconnect the power supply from other sources.
Often they fire at the same objects over and over again until they are
completely destroyed,” he added.
Kudrytskyi
said that Ukraine believes Russia is using Soviet-era maps of Ukraine, coupled
with open-source information to precisely strike the grid.
He said they
were hitting Ukrenego’s substations sometimes with “six or seven rounds of
shelling” at one time.
“Often
Russians repeat the attack, like a double tap, sometimes a triple-tap attack,”
he added, saying that five of their personnel have been killed.
Ms Antosha,
of DTEK, warned that these blackouts could mean that civilians will die, as
temperatures dip well below zero.
Of the six
thermal power plants under DTEK’s control, five of them have already been attacked.
Ten employees have been injured and one killed.
There are
also concerns about Ukraine’s renewable energy sector.
Ukraine had
sought to diversify the energy sector before the war, with officials boasting
of rapid growth of its green energy sector that pre-war provided the country
with about 11 per cent of the country’s total energy mix. Since the invasion
about 90 per cent of wind and about 50 per cent of solar power has been
decommissioned.
There are
also growing fears about the country’s nuclear power plants.
Russia has
occupied the Zaporizhia nuclear power plant (ZNPP) since March. It is the
largest in Europe and can produce more than 6,000 MW of power.
Ukraine
claims around 500 soldiers and military vehicles are occupying the power plant
and that Ukrainian personnel working there have been tortured and coerced into
working.
“In an
attempt to disconnect the ZNPP from Ukraine’s power system, the Russians have
already put the plant into blackout mode three times by firing at the power
lines that provide its power,” Minister Galushchenko said.
“At that
time, [the plant] was working on diesel generators, which could also be fired
upon by the Russian military forces at any moment. And then the Fukushima
scenario may await us.”
He called on
Russian troops and personnel to immediately leave the nuclear plant and for the
International Atomic Energy Agency to create a neutral zone where neither
Russian nor Ukrainian military are present.
The European
Commission has urged European Union countries and companies to donate more
money and equipment to support the energy sector in Ukraine.
But the
energy ministry said it needed air defence systems to halt the strikes, as
reconstructing power plants and substations was pointless if they get hit
again.