
A man gestures as he stands near wagons loaded with coal at the Zlobino railway station in Russia’s Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk. (Reuters/Ilya Naymushin)
“Coal deliveries to the thermal power station have been resumed. Wagons with about 50,000 tons of coal have already been sent to the thermal power units to meet the needs of the power system. This coal had been blocked at the border with Russia for several days,” a representative for Ukrainian Energy Ministry representative, Elena Mishchenko, wrote in a Facebook post.
The newly arrived coal is expected to help alleviate Ukraine’s mounting energy crisis, which suffered another blow after a deal to import South African coal collapsed earlier this week.
“Once we can resolve the issue of coal supplies we can achieve a lower price for electricity generation,”said Vladimir Demchyshyn, Ukraine’s Energy Minister said, at a press conference this week. “We have power stations, but we can’t use them to their full capacity unless we have enough fuel to run them.”
Ukraine’s energy shortage was prompted when Russia cut off the country’s natural gas supply in June as a result of Ukraine’s outstanding $5.3 billion debt to Russian state-owned gas giant, Gazprom. Meanwhile, hostilities in the war-torn Donbass region have halted coal production and supply to the country’s power plants, further exacerbating the crisis.

AFP Photo/Sergey Supinsky
Currently, the country is facing mass electricity cuts. The Energy Ministry has imposed limits on consumption between 8 and 11 in the morning and between 4 and 8 in the evening.
On Friday, Ukraine’s Cabinet of Ministers decided to extend emergency measures for the domestic electricity market until January—the third time such an extension has been granted over the last six months.



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