Power outages were reported after energy infrastructure was damaged. Generators were deployed to reconnect critical services, while invincibility centres, heated premises stocked with food and power banks to support residents facing power cuts, assisted around 900 people.
Rescue workers and emergency repair teams continued operations despite ongoing air-raid warnings.
The Ukrainian Sea Ports Authority reported additional damage at the port of Reni, affecting both infrastructure and administrative buildings.
Earlier Russian missile strikes on the Odesa port complex and the city had resulted in at least eight deaths and 27 injuries, including casualties on a city bus.
Energy infrastructure remained a primary target. Ukraine’s largest private energy company, DTEK, reported damage to a thermal power plant, which is currently offline.
The Zaporizhzhia Steel Works also experienced power loss, leading to an emergency shutdown of production. In previous attacks, the port of Pivdennyi had been hit, with fires affecting around 30 storage tankers holding flour and vegetable oil.
Deputy Prime Minister for the Restoration of Ukraine Oleksii Kuleba said that civilian warehouses and critical energy facilities had been damaged once again.
Reference: Pravda






