
Nearly 90 percent of the Ukrainian city of Lviv has had power restored, CNN reported Wednesday, after another flurry of Russian strikes left much of the country without power.
In a statement on Telegram, the mayor of Lviv, Andriy Sadovy, noted that planned power cuts, which became regular during the invasion, will continue due to the country’s war-damaged energy infrastructure, “so that some houses may remain without power.” Water supply and heating have also been restored, all city services are working, he added.
The situation is similar in Odesa, according to the deputy head of the Office of the President of Ukraine Kyryl Tymoshenko, where water and heat are being restored.
“Electricity supply – the region is provided, consumers are connected,” he said. Power supply in Zaporizhzhia region has also been restored.
As reported in the military administration in Ternopil region, the energy system there is “in the stage of stabilization”, consumers are “gradually connecting to the network”.
About a third of the region is provided with electricity, and in the first place, critical infrastructure facilities are connected to power grids.

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