A postcard photo of Galician Jews in the resort town of Truskavets in the 1920s or 30s Photo by Wikimedia Commons Organizers of an international conference on the history culture and traditions of East European Jewry between the late Middle Ages and 1939 are seeking papers for the event to take place on April 21-23 in Kamianets-Podilskyi There is a possibility that there will be online participation as well The conference aims to promote the study of Eastern European Jewry in Ukraine and beyond; to activate the development of Judaica as a separate branch of Oriental studies in Ukrainian academic institutions and to create a platform for academic communication between Ukrainian specialists in the field and leading scholars abroad All papers need to be in either Ukrainian or English Applications to present papers will be accepted until March 23, 2025. For more information on how to apply, click here I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning nonprofit journalism during this critical time we have stood together in strength and sorrow Our Forward team has worked around the clock to help you find clarity amid the chaos At a time when other newsrooms are closing or cutting back the Forward has removed its paywall and invested additional resources to report on the ground from Israel and around the U.S rising antisemitism and polarized discourse Support our work by becoming a Forward Member and connect with our journalism and your community See our full guidelines for more information, and this guide for detail about canonical URLs subject line “republish,” with any questions or to let us know what stories you’re picking up Copyright © 2025 The Forward Association I casually mentioned to the mayor that the town’s name he was quick to note that this is a proud Ukrainian community The highway linking this small resort town to the regional capital is festooned with billboard after billboard displaying pictures of stoic-looking Ukrainian soldiers or — my favorite — QR codes for the Ukrainian Army’s Telegram channel in which you can confidentially submit intelligence on Russian troop movements in your neighborhood Not that there are Russian troops in this part of the country Just a lot of (Ukrainian) checkpoints and military vehicles on the roads Lviv oblast (as Ukrainian provinces are called) is several hundred miles from the front lines of Ukraine’s now monthlong war with Russia The region has so far avoided the horrific violence that has scarred areas such as Donbas in the east the country’s second city of Kharkiv in the northeast and the southern coasts the oblast has transformed into a massive military staging ground a refugee reception center and a destination-of-first-choice for people from all over the world trying As one Ukrainian who recently arrived in the city from Kyiv put it to me Truskavets is a microcosm of how the war is shaping Ukrainian communities far behind the front lines who flock annually to the surrounding mineral springs in the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains This makes it a sensible destination for internally displaced persons (IDPs): It is well connected by rail to other cities in Ukraine as well as neighboring Poland and Hungary and its many hotels and lodges have thousands of beds that largely go unused in the winter off-season But accommodating so many IDPs at once has not been easy two people for every one Truskavets resident,” Mayor Andrii Kulchynskyi told me and I could see his phone lighting up with some request or military news bulletin every 30 seconds throughout our interview “America and Europe have been generous to Ukraine since the war started,” he said “We need all the help they can give us to handle the humanitarian crisis.” Andrii acknowledged that his office is struggling to sustain some basic municipal activities such as trash collection because the “war effort” requires so much bandwidth He seemed to use this phrase intentionally since Truskavets’ role is not simply to host IDPs Those fleeing the war arrive by train from the east and disembark while Truskavets residents load those same trains with humanitarian supplies to return to the front “I’m in a WhatsApp group with guys in the east since we’re all afraid that Russian aircraft will intercept the trains en route,” Andrii explained The restaurants on the main drag outside the mayor’s office bustled with customers some of them the more affluent among the IDPs creating an impression of a tourist destination in high season that masks the town’s remarkable mobilization The central commercial plaza has been converted into a massive bazaar in which IDPs collect donations of everything from clothing to children’s toys and wet wipes much of it provided by charities in neighboring EU countries that will serve IDPs and help ease the strain on the region’s limited health care facilities residents show up seven days a week to make war materiel out of craft supplies Nadia (certain names have been changed in this article) explained that on the first day of the invasion she and her staff packed up all the museum artifacts for safekeeping Nadia excitedly showed off several hand-knitted balaclavas in her crowded office before walking me to a group of grandmothers nearby who greeted me with smiles as they sewed camouflage nets Nadia asked if we ever do anything similar in America putting one’s homemaking skills toward a patriotic cause some of my classmates made a quilt for the victims of the tsunami in Sri Lanka … These nets hide our tanks from Russian aircraft,” Nadia noted with an enthusiastic smile Western Ukraine is often considered the historical heart of the Ukrainian nationalist movement residents proudly recall how nationalist partisans waged yearslong guerrilla struggles against the Soviets in the surrounding mountains even as the war is primarily being waged several hundred miles away there is an unmistakable zeal among those in Lviv oblast to defend Ukraine from Russian aggression the head of Dobrohostiv village outside Truskavets “If there were mountains in the east like there are here every farmer with a hunting rifle was setting up checkpoints in the villages looking for saboteurs,” explained Viktor Tkachuk who served for over 30 years as the mayor of Solonka region in the Lviv suburbs “It would take you one hour to travel those few kilometers from that main road [outside Lviv] to this village of Porshna because of all the checkpoints and the army and police are responsible for [guarding] the important spots.” Viktor was referring to the Territorial Defense Forces (TDF) an ad hoc umbrella group of local militias that the government first sanctioned in 2014 and has rapidly expanded since the start of the Russian invasion in late February The TDF operate under the Defense Ministry but the level of professionalization seems to vary greatly the various TDF groups have been subsumed by the Defense Ministry and look like proper paramilitary forces complete with formal training uniforms and weaponry provided by the government in rural communities in Lviv oblast they appear to be a more rag-tag lot that require little more than the approval of the local authorities to be considered “territorial defense.” a portly farmer named Mikola explained that a few days into the war he approached Vasily and asked for permission to organize the various vigilantes who had begun erecting checkpoints into some kind of semiformal outfit we saw people were self-organizing spontaneously and calling themselves Territorial Defense Forces Vasily chimed in to say that TDF members here do not receive military assistance and can carry only licensed hunting rifles Mikola maintains a schedule so that each of the volunteers numbering over 100 in a village of roughly 3,000 can rotate through patrols and checkpoint duty while still having time to look after their family or run their business (It should be noted that since the war began many of the town businesses have been repurposed or the village’s sole pizzeria-cum-nightclub which houses several families of IDPs.) The TDF volunteers share information with the military and police in the area but Others I spoke with in Lviv oblast stated more explicitly that the military does not take the TDF very seriously here The extent to which such saboteurs are actually operating in the oblast is subject to much rumor and speculation Everyone is certain that genuine saboteurs have been detained in the area Viktor recalled an incident on the fifth day of the war in which some suspected saboteurs were caught by TDF at a checkpoint outside of Lviv city and handed over to Ukrainian intelligence Others speculate that the sporadic missile strikes that have rocked Lviv oblast since the start of the war were facilitated by saboteurs Lviv police claim to have captured a spy whom they accuse of providing intelligence for the latest strike on March 26 There is every reason to suspect that Russia would employ covert agents to destroy critical infrastructure in Lviv oblast There is also every reason to suspect that wartime paranoia coupled with heightened Russophobia among the public would result in a lot of flimsy accusations of fifth column-ism it will likely be some time before we get a clearer picture of what contributions the TDF have made to Ukraine’s defense checkpoints are a fact of life for anyone traveling through western Ukraine many of these checkpoints seem to now be jointly controlled by army with the latter playing a more auxiliary role “I’d rather deal with a professional soldier,” my Ukrainian colleague Alex remarked while driving back into Lviv one day the cobblestone-paved capital of the oblast without resorting to one of the now all-too-familiar phrases such as “relative calm in a country at war” or “refuge near the Polish border” that one sees in the international press which boasted a prewar population of three-quarters of a million people has indeed become a refuge for over 200,000 IDPs from the south and east It has also been invaded from the west by an army of journalists coy “International Legion” volunteers and at least one group of genuine tourists from Ireland it seemed that the greatest risk I faced was colliding with another journalist While there have been no Russian bullets to dodge I have had to walk carefully to avoid being captured at an unflattering angle by an international camera crew deployed to one of the city’s many plazas (despite my efforts I fear that my struggles with a messy kebab were broadcast on Romanian public access) On two separate occasions I was approached by a foreign journalist in a public space for a “man on the street” perspective only for the poor correspondent to catch a glimpse of the press credentials tucked into my jacket their eyes instantly reflecting a mixture of embarrassment and frustration “I just tried speaking broken Ukrainian to an El Pais correspondent.”) Not that there aren’t genuine challenges for journalists here — for example finding alcohol in a city under martial law one can pass the day in Lviv’s picturesque city center and renowned cafes as if on holiday I had leaned rather heavily into this “island of stability” theme in the initial draft of my first dispatch from the city which I filed on March 26 just moments before two Russian cruise missiles slammed into an oil depot a couple of miles from the cafe where I was working Lviv oblast had experienced two missile strikes since the start of the war but none so close to the city center Smoke billowed out over the cobblestone streets as soldiers first responders and (needless to say) international TV crews rushed to the scene An old lady carrying groceries hobbled up to me on the street and asked me something in Ukrainian of which I only understood the word “bomba.” She mentioned something about an underground shelter (I think) and then trotted along I spent the next hour on the northern edge of the city center and witnessed a mostly business-as-usual approach from Lviv residents who had grown accustomed to sirens blaring false alarms over the past four weeks a crowd gathered at the entrance to an underground metro stop but the cafes and plazas above ground remained relatively full I got an alert on my phone that a second round of strikes had hit a military repair plant in the southern outskirts of the city which concerned me more than the first explosion The air raid alarm and attendant shelter-in-place order lifted around 8 p.m. which meant that bus service would resume and I could return to my apartment on the outskirts of town it still works in Ukraine) was overloaded with requests which left me trying to hail a cab alongside a friendly lady named Svitlana with whom I could barely communicate but who We tried without success until another air raid siren blared Svitlana grabbed my hand and walked me around the block to an old apartment building to which she knew the entry code I realized it must be her friend’s place and we were greeted by another older lady in a bathrobe who smiled and walked us down into the basement The makeshift bomb shelter was equipped with all the essentials: cushioned chairs and a power station linked to the upstairs apartment through which we could charge our phones We communicated for the next half hour through a combination of pantomiming an English-speaking teenager who studies in Prague and we had a three-way conversation in which we exchanged jokes about the Russian army the closest thing to a pan-European language that exists these days The air raid alert lifted shortly before the curfew was set to go into effect I was treated to a night of hospitality far exceeding anything that I deserved as a foreign journalist bumbling around a war zone without functional knowledge of the local language Oleg poured copious shots of some liquor that he stored in a jerrycan and had to cut with water and we smoked cigarettes late into the night as Svitlana and Lesya — both of them former opera singers as it turns out — regaled us with folk songs and the poetry of national icon Taras Shevchenko Throughout the night I wondered if there was something about my being a foreign journalist (they were somehow under the impression that the work I did was noble and selfless) that led them to open up their home or if this was some Ukrainian version of the “Blitz spirit.” As I left my hosts’ apartment the next morning after a hearty breakfast and a round of embraces I expected to see some visible changes to the city in light of the unprecedented missile attacks city life was its wartime “normal.” Kids were playing in the parks the sounds of birds chirping pierced the cold clear air and old men sat around drinking coffee outside convenience stores It is tempting to take for granted that western Ukraine will be spared the full horrors of this war particularly in light of Russia’s stalled or reversed advances further east But the truth is that no one has any idea what Russian President Vladimir Putin is going to do next Most Ukrainians I’ve spoken to — whether state officials militia members or ordinary residents of the oblast — are not worried that the ground war will reach Lviv in the foreseeable future “The Russians would have to move through so many villages [to reach us] and we have seen that every Ukrainian will defend his village.” The biggest fear is not even that Putin will repeat strikes such as the ones we experienced Saturday many Ukrainians worry that Russia might employ weapons of mass destruction far behind enemy lines to make up for their staggering losses elsewhere Or Putin might twist the arm of neighboring strongman Alexander Lukashenko to such a degree as to compel Belarusian forces to enter the war from Ukraine’s northwestern border Toward the end of my interview last week with the former Solonka mayor at his wife’s quaint pizza parlor outside Lviv a chain-smoking septuagenarian who identified himself as Anatoliy approached us and started discussing where he sees the war heading a retired military officer who is too old to fight but is returning to Kyiv soon to work pro bono as an adviser to the Defense Ministry (I cannot verify Anatoliy’s professional credentials he offered a convincing overview of the order of battle on the Azov front using parmesan shakers and coffee cups.) and they do not have depth of reserves because it is politically unpopular [for Putin] to engage in the same degree of mobilization as we do,” Anatoliy explained to my translator in raspy Ukrainian interspersed with emphysematous coughs and our own air defenses in this area are good But if that madman launches chemical weapons it will only take one or two successful warheads to psychologically devastate the oblast.” the well-spoken “international liaison” of the Free Ukraine Resistance Movement (a militia that operates under the TDF) offered a similar prognosis in a small tea shop in the Lviv city center “The war is not going to end in the next month or two.” “Putin will not be willing to step back,” Ostap continued “Russia is an authoritarian place where those who step back are eaten by their own people.” Rather than swallow the bitter pill of a stalemate in the east Putin will opt to save face and intimidate the west through an invasion from Belarus or a chemical attack near the Polish border I had preferred to think that Anatoliy and Ostap were being alarmist the Russian Ministry of Defense delivered a public briefing that suggested an about-face in which Russian forces might limit themselves to focusing on securing advances in Donbas and the Sea of Azov coast which is about as far away from Donbas as Paris is from Zagreb Were these strikes a simple one-off message to U.S who spent the weekend across the border in Poland as some Western commentators have suggested but you’d be a fool to take Putin or his generals at their word If anyone in Lviv needs a visceral reminder of the war there is no better place to go than the Latin Cathedral located just a stone’s throw from the city council in the center of town Walking between meetings one day I stumbled on a funeral procession for a Ukrainian soldier There have been several such ceremonies here since Feb and the cathedral’s stunning interior contains several memorials bearing the photographs of dozens of Ukrainian soldiers who have died in combat since 2014 — the year that Lviv oblast is in the second of four stages of mobilization meaning that combat veterans and those in the military reserves have been called up while some 15,000 people in the Oblast have joined either the army reserves or the Territorial Defense according to the head of the oblast’s military administration In attendance at the funeral procession that day was a cohort of newly enlisted soldiers they were indistinguishable from the kids working in the coffee and kebab stalls in the plaza across from the cathedral practicing the motions for placing the folded Ukrainian flag onto the coffin judging by the sidearm — corrected him at one point then smiled and patted him on the shoulder as if to say Lviv’s cafes and gastropubs are still open but an entire generation of young men and women here are preparing to fight one of the most destructive armies in the modern world This is not “normalcy.” No one knows when any part of Ukraine will see “normalcy” again Will be used in accordance with our Privacy Policy Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker Yun Seog-dae, CEO of Korea Water Resources Corp. (K-water), has participated in the Ukraine Recovery Conference, promoting K-water's commitment to reconstruction projects in the war-torn nation, according to the state-run water management company, Thursday. The international event, which took place in Berlin from Tuesday to Wednesday (local time), was dedicated to discussions on the rebuilding and reconstruction priorities of Ukraine, which is still struggling with the Russian invasion started in February 2022. Yun's participation was arranged at the invitation of the Ukrainian government, which has been closely collaborating with K-water on major reconstruction projects since last July. On the sidelines of the conference, Yun held separate meetings with high-ranking Ukrainian officials, including the vice speaker of the Ukrainian parliament, the governor of Kyiv Oblast and the mayors of Bucha and Truskavets. He also discussed funding options with the director of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. During the meetings, the K-water CEO shared some achievements made through cooperation with the Ukrainian government and local governments in urban reconstruction and water infrastructure. In particular, Yun shared development plans for industrial complexes in two regions of key post-war reconstruction projects — Horodok in Lviv Oblast and Bucha, a satellite city of Kyiv. He also discussed ways to expand the current emergency water facility support project in Truskavets to a "modernization of aging water supply systems" project. He also proposed broadening the cooperation to address the nation's long-term water infrastructure needs by introducing water quality monitoring systems to tackle climate change. K-water said it is also committed to providing immediate humanitarian aid to the war-torn nation. Earlier this month, Yun signed a memorandum of understanding with the mayor of Truskavets for urgent provision of drinking water facilities that are capable of serving 14,000 people per day. By as early as December, the company will install a mobile water treatment facility in the city, with a capacity of processing 100 tons of water per day. "The cooperation on reconstruction is not only the beginning for the restoration of peace and prosperity in Ukraine but also an important opportunity for Korea to secure global leadership in the water sector," Yun said. "By forming close partnerships with Ukraine, we will expand the foothold for Korean companies to actively contribute to Ukraine's restoration. We will also do our best to ensure that our water resources and urban reconstruction cooperation become a key diplomatic asset for Korea to become a global pivotal state." I cover South Korea's foreign policy, defense and security issues on the Korean Peninsula. Before that, I reported on immigration policies and human rights — topics I continue to follow closely. I strive to gain an accurate understanding of the issues I cover and am particularly interested in stories that amplify often overlooked voices. Tips and story ideas via email are always welcome. Recommended Contents For YouTaboola 후원링크 take part in a therapeutic swimming activity at Moldova pool in Truskavets Head of the Servant of the People faction David Arakhamia told reporters that the President has “a program speech about where we are heading Arakhamia also noted that a panel discussion on the situation in eastern Ukraine is scheduled for today a congress of the Servant of the People parliamentary faction is held in Truskavets on October 1-2 The event takes place at Rixos-Prykarpattya Hotel While citing and using any materials on the Internet links to the website ukrinform.net not lower than the first paragraph are mandatory citing the translated materials of foreign media outlets is possible only if there is a link to the website ukrinform.net and the website of a foreign media outlet Materials marked as "Advertisement" or with a disclaimer reading "The material has been posted in accordance with Part 3 of Article 9 of the Law of Ukraine "On Advertising" No 1996 and the Law of Ukraine "On the Media" No 2023 and on the basis of an agreement/invoice Online media entity; Media identifier - R40-01421 Ukraine runs on two currencies — hryvnia and metaphor Among the most powerful is the notion of “light in the darkness,” especially urgent amidst rolling blackouts and the billowing black smoke that arises from recently destroyed buildings This flourishing trade in allegory is particularly vibrant among the country’s Jews I experienced it at a communal bar and bat mitzvah in Truskavets interrupted by an unexpected electricity cut though the hotel’s generator eventually kicked in; an art program for preteens in Chernihiv illuminated by a ring light plugged into a power bank; and a bustling Kyiv Jewish community center coming to life just an hour after one of the city’s worst-ever aerial bombardments these Jews reminded me anew that light actually matters they’re literally deploying hope and healing especially critical as the devastating conflict enters its fourth winter in the words of a friend from beleaguered Kharkiv “mixed up in the same mess,” with any prior distinctions between the needy and the professionals serving them flattened against the unbearable daily march of sirens and shelling And yet the country’s next Jewish generation — young people whose ancestors survived two world wars and a history of noxious antisemitism — offers lessons in perseverance for a world embroiled in chaos The master class I got from Natalia Havyrliuk despite her grief and the multiple sclerosis that she’s developed since the start of the conflict The leader of a Jewish teen club in battered Sumy Natalia and her friends are among more than 3,100 local Jewish community volunteers across Ukraine trained and mobilized by my organization the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) which has worked for three decades to aid needy Jews and build Jewish life in the region They also carry on the tradition of battle-tested children and young adults who’ve had to face the impossible somehow adapting to sustain themselves and their communities — and even thrive Natalia told me she recently woke up to the sound of a powerful explosion and learned that a missile had hit the apartment of her colleague Irina a homecare worker at our Hesed social service center a humanitarian nexus in the city that also serves as a warm hub during extended power cuts in sub-zero temperatures when people go 48 hours or more without electricity or hot water at home and her daughter Aniechka — one of Natalia’s teens from the club and the second to die since the beginning of this conflict — were all killed instantly saved by a split-second decision to bring in the dog from the bitter Ukrainian cold “It was so painful to see all those coffins at the funerals you had just seen them — and now they’re gone,” Natalia told me “We have to do everything we can so our children can smile at least a little This has never been a country of wallowers there’s some new project happening and some initiative launched to better care for the most vulnerable Their numbers have only increased as a result of relentless bombardment So the young Jews I met carry out life-saving efforts on their behalf — operating through the robust network of Heseds and other Jewish institutions established by my organization Today — with the support of an interreligious coalition comprising the Jewish Federations International Fellowship of Christians and Jews foundations and corporations — they serve as one united supply chain for humanitarian relief reaching tens of thousands of people with more than 800 tons of aid to date These Jews — some as young as tweens — are now on the front lines of their communities’ efforts to keep going They don’t just deliver food packages and winter survival aid They run vibrant Shabbat celebrations and dynamic teen clubs They’ve been central to innovative education employment and trauma support initiatives we have launched to address emerging needs peaceful future and a time when their communities will continue to need strong and proud Jewish leaders like Natalia Referencing the sticky antisemitism that has haunted the Jewish people for millennia — again rearing its ugly head from Amsterdam to Melbourne — she joked that “for some people “And it’s true — we are,” she said with a throaty laugh Shortly after the bombs started falling in February 2022 Natalia got a call from a driver who said he’d be there the following afternoon with a delivery of JDC humanitarian aid It was difficult to find even basic supplies in Sumy then and she expected a compact car filled with a few boxes — helpful assistance the kind of thing she could unload by herself and a crowd of people arrived “like a big anthill working at breakneck speed” to unload the boxes the team was asked if they needed anything — after all everyone in Sumy was short on food and water and medicine — but no one took a thing We’ll make it through.’ — and that selflessness has inspired me to keep going,” she told me “We’ve always believed we’d hold on somehow and now it’s been more than 1,000 days of this mess We’ll show through our actions what resilience really is.”  Hanukkah: As we look ahead to 2025, we must embrace inclusion, compassion | Opinion Jews like me around the world are about to celebrate an ancient story of tenacity in the face of persecution — a narrative hinging on oil that lasted longer than expected fortitude and the promise of a better tomorrow We’ll do this in the face of rising hate against us an ongoing war in Israel and a sense that a stable Jewish future is perhaps out of reach who have shown the world that they will miraculously keep going they will outlast this moment and with that same spirit of mutual responsibility and courage is JDC’s senior video and digital content producer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Chet Holmgren had 21 points and 15 rebounds 1 Gonzaga picked up its defensive pressure in the second half to hold off San Francisco 89-73 and extend its winning streak to 17 on Thursday night Drew Timme just missed a triple-double with 20 points and Julian Strawther added 15 points for the Zags (24-2 which earned a 23rd straight victory against USF and 10th in a row on the Dons' home floor Khalil Shabazz scored 17 points for San Francisco (22-8 which honored him and the other seniors before their final home game on the Hilltop Shabazz took an elbow to the face and went down with 4:32 left in the game and his mother rushed the floor to check on him A flagrant foul was called on Andrew Nembhard who finished with 17 points and six assists for the balanced Zags Julian Rishwain's 3-pointer for USF with 2:52 remaining made it a 10-point game Gonzaga clamped down on defense in the second half to slow the Dons who were coming off a 104-71 road rout at Pacific on Monday But USF got back within 75-62 on a 3-pointer by Gabe Stefanini with 8:08 to play Gonzaga's 14-4 run early in the second broke open the game as USF missed six straight field goals during that stretch The first half saw a combined 13 3-pointers and the Zags hitting 22 of 33 shots to build a 52-42 lead at the break Gonzaga hit 8 of its first 10 shots for a 20-11 lead at the 15:22 mark of the opening half But the Dons answered with timely 3s — hitting 4 of their initial 6 from deep Strawther fell hard to the ground in front of the Bulldogs' bench with about five minutes left before halftime He took a quick moment to come out of the game stretch and catch his breath before going right back in Gonzaga shot 55% from the floor on Thursday The team secured its 10th straight West Coast Conference regular-season title on Saturday when they beat Santa Clara 81-69 despite shooting a subpar 40% Timme and Holmgren combined to go 15 for 21 with five field goals apiece in the opening 20 minutes USF sophomore Volodymyr Markovetskyy of Truskavets played 2 minutes on a day the 7-foot-2 center's homeland was under attack Gonzaga: The Zags have won 12 straight road games Gonzaga has won 34 straight conference games — 33 by double digits — dating to a 91-78 loss at BYU of Feb USF: A win would have given the Dons program its most wins in a single season since being reinstated in 1985-86 After shooting 59.3% from the floor against Pacific which was the Dons' second-best mark this season after finishing at 61.1% in a 92-76 win over Prairie View A&M on Nov The Dons' last win in the rivalry was a 66-65 home victory on Feb Gonzaga: Completes its Bay Area trip visiting Saint Mary's on Saturday having won the last seven and 22 of 26 against the Gaels USF: At San Diego on Saturday for the regular-season finale Spectators will be able to join the competition virtually Here we are to serve you with news right now quality journalism and subscribe on a monthly basis you can have full digital access to all news Proces du 13-November : ce que ces hommes opaques ont dans la tete Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit Blanditiis optio incidunt eum omnis ratione error temporibus iure porro esse Integer consectetur quam eget ipsum dictum accumsan Donec non lectus id risus rutrum ullamcorper sit amet vel nulla All news and diagrams placed on this Web site is made for internal use Its reproduction or distribution in any form are welcome in case of placing a direct hyperlink to a source Reproduction or distribution of information which contains Interfax-Ukraine as a source is prohibited without the written permission from the Interfax-Ukraine news agency Photoes placed on this site are taken from open sources only; rightholder are welcome to make demands to info@open4business.com.ua in this case we are ready to put your copyright to a photo or replace it Цей веб-сайт зберігає файли cookie на вашому комп'ютері This is another step towards strengthening the stability and reliability of the energy system of Ukraine Friendly Wind Technologies has launched a newly built workshop that will produce up to 20 wind turbines per year with a unit capacity of 4.8 to 5.5 MW The wind turbine manufacturer announced this on its Facebook page Friendly Windtechnology LLC is currently the only national manufacturer of multi-megawatt wind turbines After the start of the full-scale invasion as part of the group of companies LLC MC Wind Parks of Ukraine was forced to relocate its production facilities to Transcarpathia "Our new production line for the manufacture of wind turbines (WTUs) is ready for operation We are increasing our capacity to meet the growing demand for clean energy," the company announced the company's ambitious package of projects envisages the construction of more than 500 MW of capacity As EcoPolitic reported in January, Ukrainian Wind Parks LLC started construction of the first wind farm in Zakarpattia Oblast with a total capacity of about 80 MW The first wind turbine with a capacity of 4.8 MW was installed within the Ostrovsky wind farm in the Nizhnyovoritsk community on the border of the Lviv and Zakarpattia regions The grant agreement will be a catalyst for accelerated implementation of the technology The company is building 1,500 MW of green power in four EU countries the wind farm will provide 5% of the country's energy needs The use of materials posted on the EcoPolicy media platform is permitted only if the link to the EcoPolicy is provided and for online publications - the placement of a direct hyperlink to the page where the original material is posted The editors may not share the point of view stated in the author's material The advertiser is responsible for the accuracy of information published in promotional materials Read 15 years of Mumbai Mirror's journalism here. 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