Ukraine received one billion euros from the European Union as part of the G7 Extraordinary Revenue Acceleration (ERA) initiative, which provides Kyiv with financial resources from profits from frozen Russian assets.
This was reported by Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal.
The money will go to cover critically important budget expenditures and strengthen the state, he emphasized.
"This tranche is part of a fair and consistent approach: the aggressor must pay for the destruction he brought to our land," the prime minister emphasized.
Frozen Russian assets
The value of frozen Russian sovereign assets in the EU is almost €211 billion. In total, the European Union, the G7 countries and Australia have frozen approximately €260 billion in securities and cash.
On October 23, the EU Council finally approved a loan of up to €35 billion to Ukraine. The money is the blocʼs contribution to the G7 initiative to provide Ukraine with a $50 billion (€45 billion) loan, which will be repaid with the proceeds from frozen Russian assets.
And on October 26, the G7 countries agreed on a $50 billion loan for Ukraine using proceeds from Russiaʼs frozen assets. The US contribution is $20 billion.
The money will be transferred “through various channels” — both to replenish the Ukrainian budget, and for military assistance and the restoration of Ukraine’s infrastructure. Reuters notes that Ukraine will receive all the funds under the loan by the end of 2027.
For more news and in-depth stories from Ukraine please follow us on X.