Braced for the cold
How Kyiv is preparing for another difficult winter amid massive Russian attacks on civilian infrastructure
The first thing I did when I began writing about Kyiv’s preparation for another winter of war was to take an inventory of the basic purchases I’d made since the spring of 2022. Kyiv may be much calmer than Kharkiv, Sumy or Kherson, but it still makes sense to be prepared for attacks. So I laid out all the things I’d need to live and work comfortably in the living room.
On nights you spend in a bomb shelter, usually a metro station or a car park, you’ll need a sleeping bag, a mattress or a fold-out bed.
2025. Photo: Sergey Dolzhenko / EPA
But I never imagined losing electricity and heating at the same time. Now, as we approach the four-year mark since Russia invaded, we have a much better idea of how to get through the winter in a worst-case scenario.
It’s rare for there to be a night without air-raid sirens, which continue to sound well into the morning
On 3 October alone, Ukraine reportedly lost about 60% of its gas production capacity due to massive Russian airstrikes on the Kharkiv and Poltava regions.
Experts predict a very difficult winter ahead for Ukrainians, though that is now the norm. This is the fourth winter of this full-scale war which has preemptively been called fatal.

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