Ukraine has built the largest infrastructure project since independence.


Ukraine has completed the construction of the main water pipeline "Inhulets - Southern Reservoir", which supplies water to Kryvyi Rih and the Kryvyi Rih district.
This was reported by the press service of the State Restoration Agency.
"The main water pipeline "Inhulets - Southern Reservoir" is operating at full capacity. This is the largest project implemented by the Restoration Agency, as well as the largest infrastructure project in the years of Ukraine's independence," said Acting Head of the Agency Roman Komendant.
It was noted that the water pipeline was built from scratch in a record 11 months. After the Russians blew up the dam of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant, more than one and a half million people were left without water supply - fifteen territorial communities of Kryvyi Rih were affected. The capacity of the new water pipeline is sufficient for uninterrupted water supply to the residents of the Kryvyi Rih district.
4 strands of pipes with diameters of 1200 and 1000 mm pump 400 thousand cubic meters of water per day into the Southern Reservoir. Further, the CP "Kryvbasvodokanal" carries out purification and provides a centralized water supply service to consumers.
The construction of the water pipeline began immediately after the terrorist attack on the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant. Works were carried out around the clock. More than 1000 people and about 500 units of equipment worked on the construction in three shifts.
Read also
- The scoundrel returned: Azov soldier Prokopenko harshly commented on the prisoner exchange '1000 for 1000'
- Ukraine Failed Mobilization: WSJ Explained Why 'Contract 18-24' Didn't Work
- Russia transferred a deserter to Ukraine as part of the exchange who voluntarily surrendered to the militants
- Ukraine Could Become Trump's New Afghanistan, or Even Worse - Bloomberg
- Zelensky imposed sanctions against Mosiychuk and the son of Bohuslaev
- China supplies special chemicals and equipment to Russia for war: what Ukrainian intelligence has learned