DTEK WEEKLY DIGEST
A year of russian aggression claimed lives of 141 DTEK Group employees
141 DTEK Group employees lost lives to the barbaric russia’s full-scale invasion. 126 of them died defending Ukraine in the ranks of the Armed Forces. 4 died while performing their professional duties. Another 11 died from injuries received as a result of shelling off-duty. "This is the biggest and most painful loss both for the company and for the entire country's power sector. We will definitely restore the damaged objects; we will rebuild the destroyed ones, but we can never return the people," said DTEK CEO Maxim Timchenko.
Over the year of a full-scale war DTEK restored electricity supply for over 7 mln families
Since the beginning of a full-scale invasion, DTEK has restored electricity supply for over 7 mln customers in the city of Kyiv and in Kyiv, Odesa, Donetsk, and Dnipropetrovsk regions. The electricity supply has been restored for more than 4 mln families in the Donetsk region, 1.2 mln families in the Kyiv region, 874,000 families in the Dnipropetrovsk region, 83,000 families in the Odesa region and 773,000 families in the city of Kyiv.
DTEK CEO one-year of war anniversary address
DTEK has been at the energy forefront since the first day of the full-scale invasion. Each of us has become irreplaceable in the great struggle of the Ukrainian people for the right to life and freedom. In a mine, or under shelling at a TPP, restoring destroyed power lines, extracting gas, restoring damaged SPPs, or working in the office - we contribute to the future Victory. We all still have a lot of work ahead of us. First, make every effort to achieve the Victory, and after that, DTEK should become a leader in rebuilding Ukraine's energy system. It will be innovative and high-tech. It will become the guarantee for energy security and supply of clean electricity for Ukraine and our partners in the EU," said DTEK CEO Maxim Timchenko.
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CNN: russia has lost the energy war – DTEK CEO
DTEK CEO Maxim Timchenko gave his assessment of the situation on Ukraine’s energy front in a live broadcast with Richard Quest. I am fully confident that there is no chance for putin to plunge Ukraine into darkness. And the irony is after all the massive missile attacks we are considering the possibility of resuming exports of electricity to the EU,– mentioned Maxim Timchenko.
Bloomberg: Within the following year, Ukraine can become a major exporter of clean electricity to the EU – DTEK CEO
DTEK CEO Maxim Timchenko speaks with Bloomberg’s Tom Mackenzie and Francine Lacqua on how DTEK is addressing russia’s attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. DTEK is forming an international coalition of energy companies and equipment producers willing to come to Ukraine and develop more renewable capacities not only for internal consumption but also to export electricity to the EU. Such is our vision and the foresight on rebuilding Ukraine’s power sector, – stated Maxim Timchenko.