- russian attack on two DTEK facilities kills energy worker and injures three
russian forces attacked two DTEK facilities on August 26th. The first strike on a DTEK coal mine killed Serhiy Mushtei, a 54-year-old truck driver with over 30 years of service and injured three other workers.
A second russian strike hit a DTEK coal enrichment plant in the Donetsk region, destroying buildings and damaging equipment. No employees were harmed at this facility, which had been mothballed due to its proximity to the frontline.
russia launched another attack on August 31st, striking on four DTEK substations in the Odesa region.
- Financial Times opinion cites DTEK in highlighting investment opportunity in Ukraine
The Financial Times’ wrote in its Lex Colum that international investors should start looking for Ukrainian partners to unlock the opportunities of a post-war Ukraine.
The story highlighted DTEK as a prominent example of the trend – citing its partnerships with Vestas and Schneider Electric. It added that Ukraine could prove “fertile ground for renewable energy companies given the need to build back better and greener.
It concluded: “Betting on war proved lucrative as defence stocks rallied. Time perhaps to give peace a chance”.
- DTEK restores 1,441 energy assets in first half of 2025
DTEK Grids restored 1,441 energy assets damaged by russian attacks in the first six months of 2025, almost matching the total for the whole of 2024 (1,503)
Recovery specialists repaired 1,298 power lines spanning over 3,300 kilometres, along with 143 substations and transformer points, bringing electricity back to more than 3 million people across Kyiv, Kyiv region, Odesa, Dnipropetrovsk, and Donetsk regions.
- DTEK enhances environmental action in first half of 2025
In the first six months of 2025, DTEK expanded its environmental initiatives across DTEK Grids operations focusing on waste reduction, biodiversity protection and energy efficiency upgrades.
Learn key results here.