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To: Kazan

Have a talk with your Chechens, please.


49 posted on 04/20/2024 5:14:29 PM PDT by marcusmaximus
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To: marcusmaximus
What Kharkov and DTEK thermal power plants doink? DTEK thermal power plant parade in three days!

Bring your personal electrical generators!

54 posted on 04/20/2024 5:19:40 PM PDT by kiryandil (what Ukrainian electrical grid doink?)
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To: marcusmaximus
Anticipating Russian Spring Offensive, Kharkiv Residents Start to Flee

Nearly 200,000 city dwellers remain without power, while 50% of the region’s population still suffers from outages, officials say.

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At CHP-5, a plant in Kharkiv that generates electricity and heat, the acrid stench of smoke still hangs in the air. Its damaged generator and turbine must be replaced, according to plant manager Oleksandr Minkovich.

The plant supplied 50% of the region´s electricity and 35% of the city´s heating, Minkovich said. It has been attacked six times since the Russian invasion began, but the latest barrage destroyed “any possibility” for power generation, he said.

Spare parts for the Soviet-era plant can only be sourced from Russia, and full restoration would likely take years, he said. But Minkovitch hopes Ukraine’s Western partners will provide modern technology to decentralize power in time for winter.

Without this, he said, he’s unsure how to meet demand.

To keep the lights on, power is diverted to Kharkiv from neighboring regions, but this process overloads the grid and causes unscheduled blackouts. Businesses rarely know when, and for how long, they can rely on the grid.

“We wake up every day and have no idea if we will have power or not,” said Oleh Khromov, the owner of a popular Kharkiv restaurant, Protagonist.

Of dozens of former residents, only 10 remain in Faichuk´s apartment block in Lukiantsi.

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Before the war, 2,000 people lived in the village of Rubizhne, 14 kilometers from the Russian border. Today, only 60 remain, including Olha Bezborodova. But she is uncertain how long she will stay.

“It’s really hard. If we had light it would be easier,” Bezborodova said, cradling her toddler. She said organizations have helped her to fix her home, “but they (the Russians) are not finished, they are bombing all the time.”

55 posted on 04/20/2024 5:20:33 PM PDT by Kazan
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