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EIB helps to revive social infrastructure in nine oblasts in Ukraine: Early Recovery Programme Conference starts in Kyiv

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Kyiv, 30-31 February 2020 – More than 100 participants gathered in Kyiv for the annual conference of the Early Recovery Programme in Ukraine.

Representatives of the European Investment Bank (EIB), the European Union, UNDP in Ukraine, national and international counterparts are summarizing joint efforts and the progress made under the programme.

The preliminary results of a survey on the socio-economic impact of the Early Recovery Programme were also presented at the conference. Most respondents (70 percent) think that the recovery of social infrastructure facilities will help generate new jobs, 61 percent think it will produced better working conditions, and 70 percent think it will ease access to social services. The full results of the survey, developed by the Info Sapiens research agency, will be released soon on the UNDP’s website.

The opening remarks at the conference were delivered by Head of EIB Resident Representation for Ukraine Jean-Erik de Zagon, Head of Section of Local and Human Development at the European Union Delegation to Ukraine Frederik Coene, UNDP Resident Representative to Ukraine Dafina Gercheva and Deputy Minister for European Integration of the Ministry for Communities and Territories Development of Ukraine Yulian Chaplynskyi.

“When you really have an impact – the way we do with the Early Recovery Programme – it’s something else,” Zagon said, commenting on the successful implementation of the Early Recovery Programme in Ukraine.

“We can show people that the EU is taking care of them. It’s a success thanks to the good cooperation of all the actors and thanks to our colleagues and friends from UNDP, who were on the ground, helping us identify and implement projects.”

Dafina Gercheva, UNDP Resident Representative to Ukraine said in her opening speech that the armed conflict in eastern Ukraine and its dire consequences have been badly impacting the lives of millions across the region over the past six years.

“The EUR 200 million Early Recovery Programme, funded by the EIB, is a timely and targeted response to the needs of people affected by the conflict,” Gercheva said.

“UNDP is pleased and honoured to be part of the successful implementation of the Ukraine Early Recovery Programme and the sustainable development of the country as a whole,” she added.

Eighteen social infrastructure facilities have been successfully repaired already: namely hospitals, schools, kindergartens, hostels and libraries, providing local communities with high-quality and accessible social services. Among the facilities are two kindergartens and two hospitals that opened in Melitopol and Prymorsk in Zaporizhizhia Oblast, and in Mariupol in Donetsk Oblast after large-scale renovation and modernization work, along with six medical facilities in Kharkiv that reopened after renovation work.

The renovations were carried out under the Early Recovery Programme as part of the UN Recovery and Peacebuilding Programme.

The Early Recovery Programme covers nine oblasts of Ukraine and extends to the Ukrainian government-controlled areas in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts and the adjacent Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, and to city councils in other oblasts countrywide that host significant numbers of internally displaced people, namely Kyiv oblast (apart from the city of Kyiv), Odesa and Poltava oblasts, where more than 20,000 IDPs live, and Kherson Oblast, which hosts significant numbers of IDPs from Crimea.

Background information:

The European Investment Bank (EIB) is the European Union's bank. It is a long-term lending institution of the EU and is the only bank owned by and representing the interests of the European Union Member States. The EIB has been working in Ukraine since 2007. As of September 2019, the total EIB portfolio in Ukraine was EUR 5.9 billion for projects in energy, transport, environment and support for local government and private sector.

UNDP is the development arm of the United Nations. It has been working in Ukraine since 1993. Among other things, UNDP is helping to restore critically important social and economic infrastructure and the effective work of local governments in eastern Ukraine; creating jobs and spurring entrepreneurship among IDPs and host communities; and promoting peace and reconciliation.

For additional information, please contact Anna Honcharyk, EIB Communications Expert at a.honcharyk@ext.eib.org; or Yuliia Samus, UNDP Communications Manager at Yuliia.samus@undp.org.