One of the main targets of Russia’s ongoing attacks on Ukraine is the energy infrastructure. The extent of the destruction is enormous. “One year after the start of the war in February 2022, 76 percent of thermal power plants had been destroyed; now the figure is 95 percent,” says Ukrainian scientist Iryna Doronina. “And all the large hydroelectric power plants have also failed.” The breaching of the Kakhovka dam proved to be particularly devastating. The huge outflow of water – the reservoir covered an area 1.5 times bigger than the canton of Zurich – destroyed thousands of homes and left the reservoir a desert.
Before the war, Doronina was a lecturer at the Kyiv National Economic University; in 2022, she came to ETH Zurich as an SNSF Scholar at Risk. This Swiss National Science Foundation programme provides Swiss universities with financial support so they can give temporary employment to researchers at risk. That’s how Doronina ended up as a Senior Researcher at the ETH Institute of Science, Technology and Policy (ISPT) until 2024. Today, she continues her research at the Technical University of Munich (TUM). In Zurich, she worked closely with the groups led by Adrienne Grêt-Regamey, Professor of Planning Landscape and Urban Systems (PLUS), and by Tobias Schmidt, Professor of Energy and Technology Policy and Head of the ISTP.
Together they looked into why renewables should take centre stage in the reconstruction of the Ukrainian electricity system. The corresponding findings, to which researchers from the Technical University of Munich and the University of Bayreuth also made valuable contributions, have now been published in Joule, a leading journal for energy research. “We’ve established that practically all Ukraine’s large, centralised power plants have been attacked since February 2022. This has reduced the total electricity generation capacity to around one-third of the pre-war level,” Schmidt says. “The grid has also been considerably weakened by attacks on transmission lines and substations, particularly in the east of the country.”
Capacity reserves are key to survival
In their study, the researchers combined geospatial and public policy analyses. “Our study presents the first comprehensive, geospatial mapping of Ukraine’s electricity system as it was in February 2022 and its subsequent destruction in the war,” Grêt-Regamey says. “We also show Ukraine’s renewables potential, and we identify the policy and regulatory conditions needed to facilitate investment.”
First, the researchers created a detailed map of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure before 2022. “We wanted to understand the scope of installed power generation capacity, so we mapped 1,626 sites,” Doronina says. “This information on plants and their locations, output, production and consumption serves as the basis for further analysis.” With 59 gigawatts of installed capacity, Ukraine was one of Europe’s biggest electricity producers before 2022. The country itself required 22 gigawatts. “That means Ukraine had considerable capacity reserves, which have helped it to survive during the war,” Doronina states.