Energy Workers Beg to Save Electricity
In the industrial workshops of Bukovina, where machines should hum non-stop, tomorrow, October 20, from 6:00 to 22:00, forced power limitation schedules will be launched—a blow to the heart of production that chills the blood. This decision by Ukrenergo hits all regions of the country, and the reason is the echo of past Russian strikes on energy arteries that are still bleeding.
In the Chernivtsi region, household consumers can breathe a sigh of relief for now: the lights in homes won’t go out. But energy workers warn—the situation in the grid is fragile as glass and could shatter at any moment. They plead: cherish every bulb, every outlet, because chaos in the energy system is not just darkness but a chain reaction that strangles factories, leaving workers in limbo.
Such disruptions multiply like cracks in an old wall because the infrastructure is cracking under pressure, and stability seems like a luxury from another world. In neighboring regions, where networks operate without failures and industry breathes steadily without sudden blackouts and calls for asceticism, no one counts every minute of light: there production hums around the clock, and life doesn’t flicker to the rhythm of outages.






