Russian War Against Ukraine: Energy Dimension | DiXi Group Alert – weekly review
10.06.2026
June 1-7
On the night of and morning of June 2, Russia launched a massive missile and drone attack on energy infrastructure facilities. The main strike hit Kyiv, where 140,000 consumers were left without power.
A Russian drone damaged a container receiving building at the Centralized Spent Fuel Storage Facility (CSFSF), but the radiation situation remained stable, and Energoatom began assessing the consequences of the incident.
The government reallocated UAH 2 billion to the state budget’s reserve fund to finance measures under Kyiv’s comprehensive energy resilience plan; the funds are being allocated to the State Agency for Infrastructure Restoration and Development of Ukraine.
The average hourly electricity price on the day-ahead market (Base DAM index) for June 1–7 fell to 4,287.6 UAH/MWh (-23.1%).
The Ministry of Energy launched testing of a green zoning platform to identif optimal areas for new renewable energy projects.
Since the memorandum on energy infrastructure restoration took effect, banks have financed energy projects in Ukraine totalling over UAH 50 billion, supporting the creation and restoration of nearly 2.5 GW of generation and storage capacity.
The government launched a preferential lending program for distributed generation projects for medium and large businesses, with funding of up to EUR 25 million per project.
Ukrnafta purchased gas engine power plants with a total capacity of nearly 59 MW from the Finnish company Wärtsilä for EUR 45.6 million within the framework of the Finland-Ukraine Investment Fund (FUIF) financing program.
The environmental damage caused to Ukraine by Russian full-scale aggression since 2022 is estimated at UAH 6.9 trillion, with nature reserves and soil sustaining the greatest losses.