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    Home»World»Ukraine imposes blackouts in most regions after Russian power grid attacks
    World

    Ukraine imposes blackouts in most regions after Russian power grid attacks

    adminBy adminOctober 16, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Laura Gozzi and

    Paul KirbyEurope digital editor

    Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images A person stands amid burnt debris in an apartment damaged by a Russian drone strike on October 10, 2025 in Kyiv, UkraineGlobal Images Ukraine via Getty Images

    Russian missile and drone attacks have knocked out power in regions across Ukraine

    Emergency power outages have been brought in across almost all of Ukraine after a intensive campaign of Russian air strikes on energy infrastructure.

    This will be the fourth consecutive winter of blackouts throughout Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

    The energy ministry said all but two regions were affected. Only the eastern Donetsk region at the forefront of the war is exempt, while the northern Chernihiv region is already facing hourly outages.

    As well as targeting the power network, Russia has increasingly targeted Ukraine’s railways. Ukraine has meanwhile ramped up attacks on Russian oil refineries, in border regions and beyond.

    One oil depot in the Crimean peninsula – which Moscow illegally annexed from Ukraine in 2014 – has been burning for three days following a second Ukrainian drone attack in a week.

    The Marine Oil Terminal in Feodosia is the largest in Crimea and an important logistical link for Russian troops operating in Ukraine.

    Telegram channel Supernova+ Smoke and flames billow from an oil terminal in CrimeaTelegram channel Supernova+

    Images of the fire at Feodosia were posted on Ukrainian Telegram channels

    Kyiv’s armed forces general staff said on Wednesday that 16 fuel tanks were damaged and that a large-scale blaze was continuing to burn.

    The surge in drone attacks on oil refineries and pipelines has also led to fuel shortages and price rises in some parts of Russia – a development that Ukrainian leaders hope will hit Russia’s war effort and help bring the Kremlin to the negotiating table.

    The strikes have reduced Russian fuel exports to their lowest level since the start of the war, according to figures from the International Energy Agency.

    Ukraine’s energy ministry said emergency restrictions were being brought in “because of the complicated situation”. Emergency work was taking place in all regions affected by Russian attack, grid operator Ukrenergo said, and it urged consumers who still had power to use it sparingly.

    Temperatures in parts of Ukraine were forecast to fall to 3C overnight into Thursday.

    The electricity company in Lviv in western Ukraine said that because the outages were under emergency conditions there was no possibility to warn consumers in advance.

    Reuters A woman crosses a street with her dog during a power blackout in KyivReuters

    Power outages have increased in recent weeks because of Russia’s campaign of air strikes

    Russia argues its attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure are aimed at its military, but millions of civilians have already been affected by outages in recent weeks. On one night alone last week, on 9-10 October, a combined missile and drone attack caused power cuts in nine regions, from Kharkiv and Sumy in the north to Odesa in the south.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Moscow of aiming to “create chaos and apply psychological pressure on the population through strikes on energy facilities and railways”.

    Kyiv has long been pushing to be given more weapons that could allow it to strike deeper into Russia, and Zelensky this week vowed that long-range weapons would be used only on military targets, not civilians.

    Ukraine’s Western allies have been wary of providing long-range weaons through concern such a move would escalate the war.

    Moscow has repeatedly said it would view the use of Western-made weapons to hit Russia as “direct participation” of Nato countries in the war in Ukraine.

    However, Moscow’s “red line” on Western missiles has already been crossed without any clear consequences.

    US President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly spoken of his impatience with Russia’s failure to move towards ending the war, has said he is considering supplying Kyiv with Tomahawk missiles.

    He is due to meet Zelensky in the US on Friday.

    Illustration of a Tomahawk cruise missile with specifications including launch platforms (submarines, ships, land), speed (550mph), length (20.5ft), range 2,500km (up to 1,550 miles), and warhead types (conventional or nuclear)

    At a Nato summit on Wednesday, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said the US and its allies would “impose costs on Russia for its continued aggression” if the war in Ukraine did not come to an end.

    The US stood ready to do its part “in ways that only the United States can do,” Hegseth said, without elaborating further. He also encouraged Nato countries to contribute to the Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List (Purl) programme under which allies buy US-made weapons that are then sent on to Ukraine.

    Several countries have already said they would take part in Purl. Germany on Wednesday said it would spend $500m (£374m) on weaponry for Ukraine, while the Netherlands and Scandinavian countries have collectively pledged $1bn.

    Kyiv remains dependent on Western arms donations to push back Russian troops, although it has been developing its own defence industry.

    Research published by the Kiel Institute in Germany this week showed that military aid sent to Ukraine had declined by 43% compared with the first half of the year.



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