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Transatlantic Chain of Resilience

​Hub is aligned with both Ukraine’s national and broader European energy strategies that emphasise energy security and systemic decarbonisation

The project’s scale and vision position it as a strategic asset in the transition to clean energy, with benefits extending from the local to the international level

Systemic Decarbonisation

By producing verifiable green ammonia, the Hub creates a ripple effect, enabling systemic shift in multiple critical sand hard-to-decarbonize sectors

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Agriculture

Replacing standard fertilisers with green ammonia fertilisers cuts emissions in the sector that comprises ~23% of Ukraine's national GHGs (~76 MtCOâ‚‚e) in 2021

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Global shipping

Providing verifiable, RFNBO-compliant fuel to decarbonise shipping - a critically hard-to-abate industry reliant on heavy fossil fuels

Image by Rose Galloway Green

National grid

Supplying surplus renewable electricity  (35,000 MWh/year) to the local grid replaces gas-powered electricity - supporting  recovery of Ukraine's war-damaged energy system with clean, decentralised power

Ocean

Hub is aligned with both Ukraine’s national energy strategy and the broader European push for decarbonization and energy security. The project’s scale and vision position it as a strategic asset in the transition to clean energy, with benefits extending from the local to the international level

Regional Significance

The Hub’s vertically integrated design combining generation, storage, and production on one site 

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This will reduce Ukraine’s dependence on coal and natural gas over time, keeping more energy revenue in the national economy and enhancing sovereignty over energy supply​​

As Hub develops, we envision collaborations with civil society groups and energy sector NGOs in Ukraine to promote best practices in sustainability, community engagement, and gender inclusion in reconstruction efforts

 

The success of this Hub can unlock follow-on investments, accelerate the timeline of future projects, and firmly place Ukraine on the map as a key player in Europe’s clean energy future

Hub develops in alignment with: 

REPowerEU 

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The EU's strategy to rapidly reduce dependence on Russian fossil fuels by accelerating the rollout of renewable energy and diversifying energy supplies.

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Three Seas Initiative (3SI)

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A regional forum of 12 EU countries between the Baltic, Adriatic, and Black Seas, focused on strengthening energy, transport, and digital infrastructure connectivity.​

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​European Green Deal

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The EU's overarching growth strategy to become the first climate-neutral continent by 2050, transforming its economy to be sustainable and decarbonised.​​

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EU Hydrogen Strategy

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Roadmap to accelerate the development of clean hydrogen within the European Union. Sets targets to of 40 GW of renewable hydrogen electrolyses, 10 million tonnes of produced and 10 million tonnes of imported hydrogen by 2030.

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Ukrainian Hydrogen Strategy (in development)

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National policy designed to position Ukraine as a major producer and exporter of renewable hydrogen​​.

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Social & Economic Impact

The Hub is conceived as driver of social and economic development - designed to create jobs, build local skills, and promote inclusive growth in a region recovering from war impacts

Empowering local talent, the Hub strengthens the community and demonstrates how large infrastructure projects can deliver meaningful social benefits

Expressway Construction

Post-War Recovery

Ukraine's pre-war installed power capacity of 56.1 GW has seen significant losses, with estimates ranging from 48% to 64% destroyed, occupied, or damaged by July 2025. Energy infrastructure attacks particularly affected the industrial south, including Odesa

 

As of now, Odesa’s electricity demand already outstrips available supply

Demand will rise further as the regional economy rebounds during Ukraine’s reconstruction. With an estimated 35,000MWh surplus energy which will go directly into the grid

 

The Hub will enable electricity redistribution to nearby communities and industrial zones

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