Kyiv brings +9 MW online: how this will help stabilize the grid after massive attacks

An additional 9 MW won't solve all the problems, but it provides a critical cushion of stability — we explain who it matters to and why today.

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Launch of 9 MW — briefly on the essence

First Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Energy Denys Shmyhal reported a planned launch today of an additional 9 MW in Kyiv. The information was published by UNN after a meeting of the Headquarters for Eliminating the Consequences of the Emergency in the Energy Sector. This is part of operational recovery measures following the massive missile strikes.

“The situation with power supply remains difficult. Energy workers continue restoring facilities hit by Russia on the night of February 7. The damage is significant. We are working on comprehensive solutions, including launching additional generation capacity. Work is progressing according to the established schedules. In particular, today we expect the launch of an additional 9 MW of capacity in Kyiv.”

— Denys Shmyhal, First Vice Prime Minister — Minister of Energy

Why 9 MW matters

Nine megawatts on the scale of the capital is not a “magical” number, but it is an operational buffer. For residents it means a lower risk of local emergency outages at critical facilities (hospitals, water supply systems, heat distribution points), and for operators it buys extra time for repairs and network balancing. Energy-sector experts note that during a crisis such “small” capacity additions allow the system to withstand peak loads and avoid cascading outages.

In addition, Shmyhal reported a record daily volume of electricity imports for the recent period, which also helped stabilize the system after the attacks. Imports, together with mobile equipment and repairs, form a triangle that is currently holding the grid.

“Together with the Ministry of Development we continue working to bring in equipment from partners and distribute it from our hubs. Overall, since the start of the invasion we have received 27,000 tons of humanitarian aid. Of that, 25.1 thousand tons have already been distributed to the regions.”

— Denys Shmyhal, First Vice Prime Minister — Minister of Energy

What has already been delivered and what to expect

Over the past two weeks, 17 shipments from 11 partner countries have arrived at the Ministry of Energy’s hubs. Regions have already been dispatched 774 generators and 40 block-modular boiler houses, cogeneration units and boilers. In the coming weeks additional deliveries are expected: approximately 798 generators, 117 transformers and 120 boilers and cogeneration units. This means strengthened reserves and the ability to restore vulnerable areas more quickly.

What’s next — the forecast

In the short term, the 9 MW launch and the record imports provide an important advantage: reducing the likelihood of mass outages in the coming days. In the medium and long term, a systemic approach remains key — rapid repair of damaged substations, stable supply chains for equipment from partners, and logistics for distribution. Analysts agree: while equipment and resource mobilization is underway, the chances of avoiding serious disruptions are higher, but full restoration will take time and further international supply guarantees.

Parting question: will the current pace of deliveries and repairs be sufficient to hold the grid through upcoming load peaks? The answer depends on subsequent deliveries and the effectiveness of their distribution across the regions.

Source: statement by Denys Shmyhal, UNN; comments from energy-sector analysts.

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