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Thermal modernisation in the Ukrainian residential sector

Project News

Building modernisation offers three key benefits: warmer homes, lower bills and a contribution to climate action.

In ear­ly March 2026, jour­nal­ists from across Ukraine trav­elled to the cities of Ivano-Frankivsk and Novoy­a­vorivsk to see first­hand how res­i­dents of mul­ti-apart­ment build­ings ben­e­fit from the advan­tages of com­pre­hen­sive ther­mal mod­erni­sa­tion – and how this con­tributes to cli­mate action.

Dur­ing the press tour, media rep­re­sen­ta­tives had the oppor­tu­ni­ty to speak direct­ly with home­own­ers, local author­i­ties and rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the Ukrain­ian Ener­gy Effi­cien­cy Fund.

The activ­i­ties of the Ener­gy Effi­cien­cy Fund are co-financed by the Ukrain­ian gov­ern­ment, the Euro­pean Union and the Ger­man gov­ern­ment through the Inter­na­tion­al Cli­mate Ini­tia­tive (IKI).

 

Visible progress in building modernisation

The press tour began in Ivano-Frankivsk, a city where eight mul­ti-apart­ment build­ings have been ful­ly mod­ernised as part of the ‘Ener­godim’ pro­gramme. On the sec­ond day, the group vis­it­ed Novoy­a­vorivsk, where 21 build­ings on just two streets have been refur­bished.

One of the high­lights of the tour was the ‘Lypy 2’ home­own­ers’ asso­ci­a­tion in Novoy­a­vorivsk. The build­ing was mod­ernised back in 2019, just as the Ener­gy Effi­cien­cy Fund was get­ting start­ed. As a par­tic­i­pant in the ‘First Movers’ pilot project, ‘Lypy 2’ was the very first build­ing in Ukraine to be mod­ernised with the help of the Ener­gy Effi­cien­cy Fund.

Support from the International Climate Initiative

The IKI sup­ports the home­own­ers’ asso­ci­a­tion through all stages of prepa­ra­tion right up to the imple­men­ta­tion of ener­gy effi­cien­cy mea­sures.

Today, around 20% of the old high-rise build­ings in Novoy­a­vorivsk have been refur­bished, and work is con­tin­u­ing.

The local author­i­ties in both Ivano-Frankivsk and Novoy­a­vorivsk are active­ly com­mit­ted to sup­port­ing par­tic­i­pants in the ‘Ener­godim’ pro­gramme. In Ivano-Frankivsk, the munic­i­pal­i­ty pro­vides reim­burse­ment for up to 30% of the loan amount that home­own­ers’ asso­ci­a­tions have tak­en out to imple­ment ener­gy effi­cien­cy mea­sures. In Novoy­a­vorivsk, the local sup­port pro­gramme focus­es on reim­burs­ing inter­est on bank loans.

Contributions to climate action

Mod­ernised build­ings not only look more attrac­tive from the out­side; their main ben­e­fits are also evi­dent inside – in the form of low­er ener­gy bills and warmer homes.

On aver­age, projects car­ried out under the ‘Ener­godim’ pro­gramme result in ener­gy sav­ings of around 27%.

Voices from the press tour

Oksana Iva­niuk, head of the home­own­ers’ asso­ci­a­tion “Kytaiska Sti­na” (“Chinease Wall”) in Ivano-Frankivsk, notes:

“The results of the mod­erni­sa­tion have exceed­ed all expec­ta­tions. Res­i­dents of three-room apart­ments report sav­ings on heat­ing costs of between 35 and 40%, whilst those in two-room apart­ments achieve sav­ings of between 40 and 50%. In addi­tion to low­er util­i­ty bills, the property’s mar­ket val­ue has also risen, with apart­ment prices increas­ing by around 30%”.

Katarí­na Math­er­nová, the EU Ambas­sador to Ukraine, empha­sised the impor­tance of ener­gy effi­cien­cy mea­sures in the res­i­den­tial sec­tor and stat­ed:

“Ener­gy effi­cien­cy, sup­port­ed by the Ener­gy Effi­cien­cy Fund, brings numer­ous ben­e­fits: as Rus­sia relent­less­ly tar­gets Ukrain­ian ener­gy infra­struc­ture, it keeps homes warm when resources are scarce. In the long term, it boosts eco­nom­ic recov­ery, com­pet­i­tive­ness and invest­ments, because the cheap­est ener­gy is the ener­gy we don’t use”.

Background to the ‘Energodim’ programme

The ren­o­va­tion work on the build­ings vis­it­ed is being car­ried out as part of ‘Ener­godim’, a nation­al pro­gramme imple­ment­ed by the Ukrain­ian Ener­gy Effi­cien­cy Fund. The pro­gramme offers home­own­ers’ asso­ci­a­tions a reim­burse­ment of 60 to 70 per cent of the costs for labour, mate­ri­als and equip­ment, depend­ing on the pack­age of mea­sures cho­sen.

This usu­al­ly includes, amongst oth­er things, the instal­la­tion of a com­mer­cial heat meter and indi­vid­ual heat dis­tri­b­u­tion units, the insu­la­tion of inter­nal heat­ing and water pipes, the hydraulic bal­anc­ing of the heat­ing sys­tem, the replace­ment or repair of exter­nal doors and win­dows in com­mu­nal areas, and the ther­mal insu­la­tion of walls.

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