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Two New Power Lines with Romania: How They Will Strengthen Chernivtsi Oblast's Energy Security

During his visit to Bucharest, Zelensky announced the signing of an agreement to build two cross-border power transmission lines — one interconnector could be operational as early as the end of 2026. We examine what this gives Ukraine now and why neighbors are important for energy resilience.

Oleg Bazylewicz

By Oleg Bazylewicz

March 12, 2026 · 2 min read

Two New Power Lines with Romania: How They Will Strengthen Chernivtsi Oblast's Energy Security
Фото: depositphotos.com

A quiet agreement with big significance

In Bucharest, Ukraine and Romania officially launched a project to build two cross-border transmission lines. This is not a high-profile declaration — it is an infrastructure move that directly affects the energy resilience of border regions, in particular the Chernivtsi region.

"We are working to expand cross-border energy cooperation. It is important that we are building two new lines for electricity supply with Romania. Work is beginning. This is something that can support our regions, including the Chernivtsi region..."

— Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine

What exactly and when

According to the President, the document on the construction of the interconnectors was signed during the visit. Currently only one line operates between the countries; two more are planned — one of lower capacity, the other larger in scale. The first of the new interconnectors could be ready by the end of 2026.

Why it matters now

Technical diversification. Due to massive Russian strikes on Ukraine's energy infrastructure, electricity imports have become critical to ensuring supply for consumers. In February 2026 the country imported about 1.26 million MWh — 41% more than in January, and five times more than in February 2025. The new interconnectors will reduce the load on individual network nodes and provide more backup supply routes.

Geopolitical context

The expansion of crossings comes against a backdrop of statements about possible blocking of electricity exports to Ukraine by some neighbors. Additional lines with Romania make the energy system more resilient to political risks and supply restrictions.

"The relevant document on the construction of interconnectors was signed today"

— Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine

Social and practical effect

Energy links often function as backup corridors: the 2023 example when Romania helped export Ukrainian grain during blockades at other borders showed that neighborly solidarity has practical effects. Likewise, the new transmission lines can become a critical option for supporting regions during attacks on the power system.

Regulatory and technical challenges

The signing is the first step. Detailed technical designs, synchronization of standards, financing, and maintenance of the infrastructure are needed next. Energy market experts emphasize: the time from project to implementation depends not only on resources but also on intergovernmental coordination and the maintenance schedules of domestic networks.

What’s next

This project is part of a broader trend of regional integration: in 2023 the Khmelnytskyi NPP–Rzeszów line was restored, and neighbors (Moldova, Poland) are also interested in new crossings. For Ukraine the key task is to turn signed documents into concrete investments and clear implementation timelines.

Summary: two new transmission lines with Romania are not an instant solution to all problems, but a real infrastructure step toward greater network reliability and a reduction of risks caused both by the military threat and by political supply restrictions. Now it is a matter of technical implementation and financing — will the declarations be turned into working contracts?

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May 26, 2026