Russia Launches New Missile Barrage at Ukraine, Targets Gas Infrastructure

Reuters
By Reuters
January 15, 2025Russia–Ukraine War
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Russia Launches New Missile Barrage at Ukraine, Targets Gas Infrastructure
Yaroslava Sukach stands next to a crater following a Russian missile strike on the village of Sknyliv, some 60km from Lviv, Ukraine, on Jan. 15, 2025. (Yuriy Dyachyshyn/AFP via Getty Images)

Russia launched scores of missiles and drones at Ukraine on Wednesday, targeting gas infrastructure and other energy facilities in western regions in a new barrage against the Ukraine’s power system.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that the Russian forces launched over 40 missiles during the morning attack and used more than 70 drones overnight.

The capital Kyiv also came under attack, with hundreds of residents taking shelter in underground metro stations across the capital.

The governor of Ukraine’s western Lviv region said two energy facilities, in the Drohobych and Stryi districts, were damaged. In neighbouring Ivano-Frankivsk, the governor said air defences were fending off Russian attacks on facilities.

The air force also said that gas infrastructure facilities in the Kharkiv region in the northeast were attacked.

Russian Defence Ministry said that its forces conducted strikes on Ukrainian energy facilities, successfully hitting all designated targets.

Ukraine’s oil and gas company Naftogaz said there were no outages, adding that “gas supplies to population were uninterrupted.”

Ukrainians use natural gas mainly for heating homes and cooking. The country uses gas stored over the summer months to use in winter, when daily production does not cover consumption.

Ukraine’s underground gas storage facilities are located in the western part of the country, including in the Stryi area. Their role has grown since Kyiv refused to extend a gas transit agreement with Russia.

Russia has stepped up its bombardments of Ukraine’s power sector and other energy infrastructure since March 2024, knocking out half of the available generating capacity and forcing long, rolling blackouts across the country.

Ukrainian cities, businesses, and residents rushed to install new generating capacities, including solar panels, batteries, generators, and other equipment to increase their energy independence and survive the critical cold months.

Zelenskyy, who visits neighbouring Poland on Wednesday, reiterated his pleas to Kyiv’s Western allies to strengthen Ukraine’s air defence.